East of Flatbush, North of Love: An Ethnography of Home is an ethnographic memoir that examines life growing up in the West Indian enclave of East Flatbush, Brooklyn. Much of the book centers around music, and it pays homage to a borough that is quickly changing under the specter of gentrification. Author and former Syracuse University professor Danielle Brown uses music to teach the reader about life in this immigrant community, as well as in her parents' native Trinidad. Recalling the songs of her youth, especially the ones that her mother would sing to her, Brown employs music—from calypso to hip hop—as an educational tool to teach history and to illuminate how the legacy of colonialism and imperialism continues to impact people of color today. Danielle Brown, Ph.D., is the founder and owner of My People Tell Stories, LLC, a publishing and production company dedicated to promoting diversity through better representation of people of color. Brown is a former Assistant Professor of Music History and Cultures at Syracuse University. She earned her doctorate in Music from New York University with a concentration in ethnomusicology and a specialization in the music of Latin America and the Caribbean. Brown is an active vocalist and cuatro player; she composes and performs jazz and Latin American and Caribbean-based music.