Surprise your young ones this Black History Month, with a gift of new books that tell stories they can relate to, filled with characters that look like them!
I recently overheard a concerned woman speaking of how much she is enjoying reading to her young grandchildren. She was describing her search for books to read to her one and two year old grandchildren.
What a pleasure it was to recommend EsoWon Books as a source for books to support her effort to inspire her infants with a love of reading. EsoWon sends out regular email newsletters, filled with their latest book offerings, and the wonderful authors they present in the store. You definitely want to subscribe.
And wouldn't you know it, I was able to forward to her the email I'd just received presenting books for the youth! Reviews of the books were written Ebony Elizabeth Thomas a University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education assistant professor and co-editor of "Reading African American Experiences in the Obama Era."
Please visit EsoWon Books online and purchase these and other selections from them. They are located in Los Angeles, CA, in Leimert Park.
lovu,
Kendke
An especially good piece in the LA Times brings the spotlight of Black
History Month and new Children's Literature. Read it below.
Four children's books introduce African American experiences
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Picture books are often
the primary means through which young children in the United States
first learn about our nation's history. Telling stories about
traumatic past events can prove challenging, though. How can we
inspire young people from all backgrounds while being honest about the
pain and the hope of the African American story?
Taking up this charge,
four new picture books by award-winning authors and illustrators
introduce slavery, Reconstruction, the Harlem Renaissance, and the
civil rights movement to a new generation.
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The 1962 arrests of three young black women after they ordered lunch in a white establishment set off a series of protests in Huntsville, Ala., - from a Blue Jean Economic Sunday economic boycott to a "Please Support Freedom" balloon launch. E.B. Lewis' illustrations highlight the contrast between the relatively peaceful integration of Huntsville, King's nonviolent March on Washington, D.C., and comparatively violent incidents in Birmingham, Ala., and serve as an eerie echo of today's "Black Lives Matter" protests.
Faith Ringgold's "Harlem Renaissance Party" (Amistad: 40 pp., $17.99, ages 4-8)
is a fantastic voyage to one of the brightest periods of black
history. Young Lonnie and his Uncle Bates fly the fictional Harlem
Airlines back through time and encounter luminaries from W.E.B. DuBois
to Langston Hughes.
Representing
famous figures from this period of African American history as giants
through her lyrical prose and iconic illustrations, Ringgold transports
readers from the sidelines of a Marcus Garvey parade to the Schomburg
library where Zora Neale Hurston reads folklore from "Mules and Men."
Next, Lonnie and his uncle breeze through Madam C.J. Walker's beauty
school and enjoy a Paul Robeson play. Their magical day ends with a
Josephine Baker dance party. This picture book stands on its own as a
fun read and could easily be paired with other books about individual
notables of interest from the period.
"Real freedom means 'rithmetic and writing": Connections between literacy and liberation emanate from each page of husband and wife author-illustrator team Lesa Cline-Ransome and James E. Ransome's "Freedom's School" (Jump at the Sun/Disney: 32 pp., $17.99, ages 6-8).
In the years immediately after the Emancipation Proclamation, young
narrator Lizzie is hungry to learn, and her hunger is nurtured at home,
in school and by her neighbors. Arson disrupts her ordinary life,
leaving Lizzie's community devastated. Lizzie's teacher is prominent in
the foreground of the spread featuring the burning school, doubled
over and weeping. Boys throw pails of water on the fire, while adult
men, carrying two pails each, seem to pause as they recognize the
futility of their mission.
The
cause of the fire is not directly stated, but in the left background, a
white man on horseback peers at the scene, his eyes shadowed by the
brim of his hat. Lizzie's family and neighbors work together to rebuild
the school, demonstrating the strength and resilience of this black
community.
Ann Turner's attempt to render Sojourner Truth's life in her own words in "My Name Is Truth: The Life of Sojourner Truth" (HarperCollins: 40 pp., $17.99, ages 6-8)
is commendable. But there seems to be a mismatch between Turner's bold
free verse and James Ransome's gently drawn illustrations.
For
instance, in one spread, the text reads: "I got bought for $100 when I
was nine / at least they spoke my home tongue, Dutch." Truth continues,
"next place (I was bigger now, worth $150) / they did not speak words I
knew / I was always getting beat." In the foreground, two white men
face each other with closed mouths; one is clutching a handful of
bills, while the other's hands are folded behind his back. In the
background, Truth stands with eyes closed and a calm expression on her
face. She is surrounded by sheep and stands against a backdrop of
neatly plowed fields.
There
is little sense of Truth's reality in this illustration, no hint that
her owner once disconcertingly "fired up a bunch of green sticks in the
fire hardened like stone / and beat me until the blood ran." While
this picture book features several high points (including a brilliant
montage showing Truth's journey to freedom) and includes a helpful
biography in the endpapers, young readers may be left with considerable
confusion about the significance of some events. "My Name is Truth"
would work best paired with other books for this age group about
Truth's life as well as picture books about slavery in general.
Ebony Elizabeth Thomas
is an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Graduate
School of Education and is co-editor of "Reading African American
Experiences in the Obama Era."
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