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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: alice randall, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Interview: Alice Randall, Caroline Randall Williams, Shadra Strickland

Alice Randall is the only Black woman in history to have written an number one country song. She’s a produced screenwriter and a successful author of contemporary adult fiction. Caroline Randall Williams, her daughter, is an award winner poet and the great-granddaughter of Arna Bontemps. Shadra Strickland  won the Ezra Jack Keats Award and the Coretta Scott King/John Steptoe Award for New Talent in 2009 for her work in her first picturebook, Bird, written by Zetta Elliott. Strickland co-illustrated Our Children Can Soar, winner of a 2010 NAACP Image Award.

Yesterday, I posted a review of their soon to be released collaborative children’s book, The Diary of B. B. Bright Possible Princess. Today, I’d like you to spend a little time getting to know these talented women!

Interview: The Diary of B.B. Bright Possible Princess

What a wonderful, precious book! How did you ladies decide on this collaboration?

Well, Caroline and I began this collaboration literally 25 years ago, August 24, 1987 when she was born. Before she saw daylight I was telling her stories. By the time she turned three, she was editing the stories, adding characters, suggesting events. Eventually we both fell in love with a black fairytale princess that we invented by telling stories back and forth to each other for years. When Caroline graduated from college we decided it was time to share our princess with the world. We eventually started looking for the perfect artist to give. B.B. physical life and found Shadra.

My awareness of the collaboration understandably begins a little later than my mothers, but I think she’s absolutely right; at about three, I distinctly recall beginning to chime in with my ideas about a princess that looked something like me. I had princess books, and historical books about brown children, but with very few exceptions, no fairy stories with girls of any color! That’s why it’s exciting for me that even though B.B. is brown, she meets queens from all over– China, Russia, Greece, Japan, Egypt– it’s time to see princesses from around the world, and I’m so pleased my mother and I are able to answer that call.

I didn’t realize that you’re a mother/daughter team! That makes the story even more special but, it makes me wonder if it was difficult to not to have more  of a presence of BB’s mother in the story?

Someone told me a long time ago, when you become a mother you step out of the picture and become a

Alice Randall & Carolyn Randall Williams

frame. I think that is something the Raven Queen understands. And B.B.’s story is the Raven Queen’s story–because it is every girl’s story. We are all called upon to one day start taking care of ourselves and encounter the world unsheltered by family but sustained by family love as well as our own courage, creativity, and curiosity.

This B.B.Bright is so very different from books we typically find for tweens. How difficult was it to get the book published?

A bit. People would love our princess but not quite know what to do with her. Caroline and I were steadfast. As women who had both been black girls searching the shelves for a book we didn’t find–one with an intrepid black princess– We knew what it was we wanted to create. Eventually we found a publisher who believed that we could have a book that worked on multiple levels—as an amazing book for every girl  but as a especially wonderful book for girls of color, as a tween chapter book and as a book Mamas and Aunties can read to the little girls they used to be even as they read to their children.

I really hope that people realize that this book about a beautiful brown-skinned girl is an empowering story for ALL girls! Are you planning a sequel? There are things I still need to know!

We are absolutely planning a sequel that will take B.B. to Raven World. And we’ve also have more possible princesses to introduce to the world. Each of them will have her own quilt and Godmommies but they will be different quilts and different Godmommies.

Shadra: How did you resist just turning this into a picture book and illustrating the entire

Shadra Strickland

story?!

Ha! My schedule, mainly. From what I understand, the story will be turned into a picture book soon.

When Christina, our editor approached me about illustrating the book, I originally turned her down. I was in the middle of my first year of teaching and two picture book manuscripts. But, when I read the story I was hooked. There was no way I could pass up the opportunity to contribute to such a unique story.

Illustrating a picture book is like running a marathon. Many, many months of work go into it before you begin to see any real results. Chapter books, middle grades, and YA novels allow slightly more instant gratification. It’s also a nice a nice way to add some variety to my picture book work.

The story was just too delicious to turn down. A young, spunky black princess coming into her own…it was right up my alley.

Are the images going to be in color in the hardback?

Just as the text of the novel is presented as diary entries B.B. has written, the interior drawings are presented as B.B.’s pen and ink or pencil and paper creations. Shadra has done such a terrific job of creating drawings that convey a sense of how B.B. thinks and creates as well as images that delight the eye. But Shadra’s work does delight the eye! I like to think of the cover painting as a portrait one of the Godmommies painted of B.B.

It was a pleasure meeting all of you, including B.B.! Thank you for the interview!


Filed under: Authors Tagged: african american, Alice Randall, Caroline Randall Williams

1 Comments on Interview: Alice Randall, Caroline Randall Williams, Shadra Strickland, last added: 9/4/2012
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2. book review and a pairing: The diary of B. B. Bright Possible Princess

“I can’t adequately convey how cute and fun this book is.” ~Rhapsody in Books

title: The diary of B. B. Bright Possible Princess

authors: Alice Randall and Caroline Randall Williams

illustrator: Shadra Strickland

date: Turner Books; September, 2012

main character: B.B. Bright

reading level: 3.0

B.B. Bright is an orphan girl who lives on an island with her three godmommies. As she faces her thirteenth birthday, she begins to realize that she wants more than the protection of the island. She wants to meet boys, wear stylish clothes and have friends. But, to get off the island, she must pass the princess test. As she writes in her diary, we learn what her preparation requires.

No doubt, this book has a slow start. I thought I was going to be stuck in the world or preteen angst as scenes of complaints lasted just a bit too long. I am so glad I didn’t let that deter me from continuing to read. I was quickly lost in B.B.’s fantasy world which was framed in an expert use of language,  crafted in master storytelling techniques and decorated with darling drawings. The authors took care to define each character and to underline their uniqueness, an essential element in the story’s message. Readers who may not even have ever wanted to be a princess will realize the everyday, the ordinary specialness in princesses and indeed in themselves. Being a princess here is more a euphemism for being a woman than for living on a glass pedestal.

In writing this story with its positive messages, Randall and Williams use this brilliant young black girl to show all girls their potentials. Both women (who are mother and daughter) are accomplished writers in their own right and this is their first published novel collaboration. Tomorrow, I’ll have post a recent interview with them.

Handcrafted quilts play an important role in this story. In fact, when I saw the octagon that B.B. drew, I

Click for directions

thought about octagonal quilt pieces. I would invite young girls who read this book to stitch an octagonal block and to either write or embroider one facet of their personality on each of the eight sides of the piece. Backs can be sown onto the individual quilt squares or they can be sown together to create a group quilt. What did B.B. see in herself? What do you see in you?


Filed under: Book Reviews Tagged: african american, Alice Randall, Caroline Randall Williams, MGfic, Shadra Strickland

3 Comments on book review and a pairing: The diary of B. B. Bright Possible Princess, last added: 9/4/2012
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3. Ada's Rules - Alice Randall

Ada's Rules: A Sexy Skinny Novel by Alice Randall
Ada Howard is the wife of the preacher and has a lot of responsibilities.  She hasn't been making time for herself recently.  After Ada hears that her 25 yr college reunion is coming up she decides to lose weight to impress an old boyfriend.  Ada outlines her journey and new ways of living healthy in each chapter.  This was an excellent read.  The author manages to keep it light and fun as Ada rediscovers herself and her body. 

Author Pearl Cleage's blurb says it best " Ada's Rules might be a diet book disguised as a novel, and it might be a novel disguised as a diet book, but I guarantee it will make you laugh and make you think, while it nudges you oh so gently in the direction of a brand new way to think about and celebrate your body"

Beyond the laughter, Randall has created a very realistic character in Ada Howard with valid concerns that readers will easily cheer for as she tries to for something better at 50.   This would make an excellent Mother's Day gift. 

Read the first three chapters via the publishers site
Starred Publishers Weekly review

2 Comments on Ada's Rules - Alice Randall, last added: 4/28/2012
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