About Author

Michael Thornhill M.A. is an AfroCuban author, consultant, and recovering DEI practitioner whose work powerfully excavates the layered realities of race, erasure, tokenism, and mixed identity in North America. Adopted and raised in Coral Springs, Florida—and later coming of age in New Castle, Pennsylvania—Michael brings a deeply personal lens to his critique of systems that demand performance while erasing personhood.

As a neurodivergent thinker and somatic strategist, he approaches both writing and consulting with a unique blend of pattern recognition, anthropological clarity, and trauma-informed precision. His voice is as incisive as it is human—cutting through platitudes with bold truth-telling, yet always rooted in the dignity & complexity of lived experience.

Through books, workshops, and public dialogue, Michael offers language for what so many have lived but never named. Whether on the page or in the room, he creates space for those brave enough to be heard—to feel seen, called in, and called into community.

His work is not just read—it is felt.

About Book 1

Written in the same spirit of; Beverly Daniel Tatum’s Why Do All The Black Kids Sit Together in the Cafeteria?, James Loewen’s Lies My Teacher Told Me, and Adrian Pei’s The Minority Experience. This book seeks to expand the memoir genre through what Michael Thornhill terms: Mirror Memoir.

What is a mirror memoir?

Mirror Memoir is an ancient practice Michael is honoring that already lives in the marrow of our communities. It lives in the oral traditions of Black and Brown communities, where stories of survival are whispered between classes, sung across generations, and laughed into existence at lunch tables.  From oral tradition to literature, this book honors a culture that transmutes harm into healing— one where the pages don’t just tell a story, they reflect one.

Imagine reading a book, and somewhere between the lines, you realize the book is reading you. The narrative unburies stories you thought were forgotten. Then, just as your chest tightens or your shoulders tense, the book pauses and asks: How’s your breathing? Is there tension somewhere in your body? What stories live there, in that tightness?

Mirror memoir is not just something you read—it’s something that reads you back. You don’t finish these pages bragging about how well you understood the book. You close it whispering how deeply you felt understood. Because a mirror memoir knows: you were never alone. And you might just discover that truth in these pages. 

The axe forgets and the tree remembers.
You can’t have a short memory and be Black.
You’ll open yourself up for attack.
You gotta have a long memory
cause you’re singing a long song
.” 

-Dr. Kokahvah Zauditu-Selassie