Yesterday, Publisher's Weekly ran an article about the OurStory app, due out in January of 2017 from We Need Diverse Books.
As readers of AICL know, I am a strong advocate for WNDB. But, readers also (likely) know that, at my core, I'm an advocate for education and what children learn in the books they read.
My first response to the news about the OurStory app was "Cool!" I looked at the graphic at the top of the article and was thrilled to see Tim Tingle's How I Became A Ghost there. But I also saw Tim Federle's Better Nate Than Ever. So, I felt a bit less enthused...
Federle's book is praised because of Federle's treatment of Nate's sexuality. I welcome that, too, because Native boys need books that normalize homosexuality, but how, I wonder, do those Native boys feel when they read that part where Nate sits "Indian style"? And, how do they feel when they get to the part where Nate's aunt sees cowboys (in costume at Halloween) approaching and says "look out for Indians." She's corrected right away, but the correction doesn't work. She's told to say "Native Americans" instead of "Indians." So, a Native kid is supposed to be ok with her saying "Look out for Native Americans"? (See my review of Federle's book.)
I completely understand that we need books for middle grade kids with characters like Nate--but not ones that fail with respect to the Native content.
Seeing Better Nate Than Ever, then, makes me wonder about the books in the app. Did the people who selected the books decide that the needs of LGBTQ kids is so important that they can look the other way regarding the Native content?
That happens a lot. People who care about misrepresentation of groups that have a history of being omitted or stereotyped come across a book that gets things right about one group, but, that has same-old problems with Native content. They choose to look away from the Native content. I hear that all the time about Touching Spirit Bear. And I heard it when I raised concerns about The True Meaning of Smekday. I heard it last year, too, in my critique of Rae Carson's Walk On Earth A Stranger. People say that this or that author tried and deserve credit for trying. I understand that thought, but again, my commitment is to the children and teens who will read and learn from their books. I will not throw children under the "they tried" bus.
Last year when WNDB worked with Scholastic on diversity fliers that included books with problematic Native content, I was disappointed. I'm disappointed again. I want to wholeheartedly say "Get the app!" but I can't. When it is available, I'll be back with a review.
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Blog: American Indians in Children's Literature (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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In this discussion-based breakout session, we have multiple perspectives from different parts of the children's literature community:
Pat Cummings, author/illustrator of over thirty-five books for young readers (and Board member of SCBWI, the Authors Guild, and the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, among others.)
Stacey Barney, Senior Editor at Penguin/Putnam Books for Young Readers
John Parra, Golden-Kite winning illustrator.
Don Tate, author and illustrator, winner of the Ezra Jack Keats Award.
Lisa Yee, author of 16 books and winner of the very first Sid Fleischman Humor Award.
Some highlights:
Stacey Barney:
"Write organic stories." Sometimes she finds that it's almost as if writers are checking off boxes for diversity with their diverse cast of characters, but "character shouldn't feel like categories."
John Parra:
"Be respectful. Show it to others who are part of those communities. Make sure authentic is how it's portrayed."
Don Tate:
"Study. Research. Vet. ...Make sure you're not exploiting the topic."
Lisa Yee:
You can write outside your experience "but you have to get it right."
The panel are telling us fascinating stories, like Lisa sharing how her Millicent Min (in 2003) was the first middle grade book with a photo of an Asian American kid on the cover.
Don shares about doing a school visit when he was asked by a 5th grade class if he only illustrates Black people, and how he asked the two African American boys in the class if they felt like they've read books that represented them - and they said no. So he turned to the rest of the class and explained that he's made it his mission, he's built his whole career, to create positive portrayals of people that look like those two boys… and the whole class clapped.
Stacey tells us about teaching (elementary and preschool and high school), and reading picture books to the kids, and how she made an effort to choose picture books that reflected their experience. "Kids are kids."
Pat speaks of her school visits, and how kids pick up books out of curiosity. She shares how she was asked once by a British author why she only does books with Black characters. Pat countered, asking the British author why they only created books with British characters…
John speaks of how he sees diverse books being published, but the awards and reviews and the best lists of the year aren't that diverse. After they've published, how do they get recognized and supported?
They cover editorial staffing (and the importance of diversity in staffing across departments, including marketing, publicity and sales), being vetted by additional experts, and much, much more.
Blog: Shelf-employed (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: friendship, graphic novel, fantasy, cars, sci-fi, gods and goddesses, Mexican Americans, #weneeddiversebooks, Add a tag
Lowriders to the Center of the Earth
Written by Cathy Camper
Illustrated by Raúl the Third
They're back!
The impala - Lupe Impala, master mechanic
The mosquito - Elirio Malaria, the finest detail artist around
The octopus - El Chavo Flapjack Octopus, washcloth-wielding polisher of the Lowriders in Space Garage
If you think lowriders are impractical, think again. When the three amigos from the Lowriders in Space Garage go in search of their missing cat, their rocket-powered lowrider is just what they need. In this second book in the series, the three friends journey to the center of the earth and face off against a trickster coyote, an Aztec God, and other legendary Mexican and Aztec foes. As in the first book, they do it with humor, brains, and style—lowrider style—bajito and suavecito (low and slow).
Lowriders to the Center of the Earth is so visually cool, that it looks more like an older brother's indie comic book than a middle grade graphic novel. Raúl the Third uses red, black, and blue ink on sepia pages, and creates expressive faces, wild action, and hidden humor. The illustrations have a distinctly Mexican flair and invite the reader into the culture. His art is a perfect complement to Cathy Camper's hilarious wordplay. It's difficult to imagine that kids can learn Spanish, geology, ancient Aztec culture, Mexican culture, and the virtue of teamwork by reading a book that screams divertido (fun) but they can! Camper's dialogue is sharp and witty, and even features bilingual puns, as in this exchange between Lupe and the trickster coyote.
"Have you seen our cat?"
"Knock knock."
"Who's there?"
"Señor."
"Señor who?"
"Señor cat? I don't think so."
¡Ja, ja, ja!
This book may be even better than the first!
- Download the Lowriders Activity Kit here.
- Read an excerpt from Lowriders to the Center of the Earth here.
- One of the artist's favorite panels from Lowriders to the Center of the Earth here.
- My review of the first book in the series, Lowriders in Space may be found here.
My copy of the book was provided by the publisher at my request when my LibraryThing copy went missing in the mail.
Blog: Shelf-employed (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: bullying, friendship, boys, elementary school, disabilities, immigrants, digital audiobook, #weneeddiversebooks, Indian Americans, Add a tag
Save Me a Seat
by Sarah Weeks and Gita Varadarajan
Read by Josh Hurley and Vikas Adam
This is a perfect middle grade novel for highlighting how easily one can mischaracterize another's words or actions. It's also an inside look at the immigrant and disability experience. Teachers, you should read this one and share it with your students!
I reviewed Save Me a Seat for AudioFile Magazine. The book spans only five days in fifth grade, the first week of school at Einstein Elementary School in Hamilton, NJ. Its sections are titled with the school lunch of the day —Chicken Fingers, Hamburgers, etc., and chapters alternate between Joe, a boy with auditory processing disorder (APD) and Ravi, a recent immigrant from India. Both boys are targets of the school bully—Joe, because of his disability, and Ravi because of his heavily accented English (which he himself cannot hear) and his family's style of food, dress, and manners.
Although Ravi was a favored, top-ranked student in his native Bangalore, India, his accent and lack of knowledge about his new country land him in the resource room at Einstein Elementary. Joe also visits the resource room to learn coping skills for his APD. Initially, Ravi views Joe with disdain —mistaking the outward signs of his disability for stupidity.
In each chapter, the boys recount the same scene, allowing the reader or listener to fully understand how our perception of an event is shaped by our cultural, family, and personal background. I'm sure that the printed book is wonderful as well, but the use of dual narrators in the audiobook really hammers home the differing perspectives.
Read my complete review of Save Me a Seat for AudioFile Magazine here. (An audio excerpt is also available at the same link, however, it only features the character Ravi, read by Vikas Adam.)
Read other reviews of Save Me a Seat and an interview with the authors at Sarah Weeks' website.
I recently began working in a library with many new Indian-American families, and reading Save Me a Seat was enlightening. The challenges involved in adapting to a new country are many and cannot be overlooked. I'm so glad I listened to this one!
Blog: Shelf-employed (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Advance Reader Copy, #weneeddiversebooks, family life, India, coming of age, Add a tag
We receive news of current events from many sources: news outlets, Facebook, BuzzFeed, friends, family, etc. Some of it is accurate, some of it is false, much of it is biased. At best, each source reveals a glimpse of a larger picture.
I am in not suggesting that children's literature or cooking shows* can replace knowledge of current events, but it's easier to understand what's happening in a location if you understand what it's like to live there, play there, work there, learn there, and eat there.
I feel like learned more about the Iranian people from reading Persepolis or watching *Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown: "Iran" than I gleaned from "news." Similarly, I never truly grasped the standing of females in Saudi Arabia until I read The Green Bicycle, based on the award-winning documentary, Wadjda. In The Green Bicycle, Wadja opens readers' hearts to the everyday struggles of girls in Iran.
In Child of Spring, Basanta will open a door to the lives of children in a small Indian community. You will be glad you passed through.
Child of Spring by Farhana Zia.
March, 2016, Peachtree Publishers.
(Advance Reader Copy)
Basanta lives in a small hut in India. Though only 12-years-old, she, and most of her friends, work. Her best friend, Lali, takes care of siblings while her mother works. The handsome Bala is a jack-of-all-trades - begging, gambling, stealing, or performing. Beautiful and wily, Rukmani makes clay pots. Basanta works at the Big House with her mother - cooking, cleaning, and serving the whims of a wealthy family,
The station tower clock struck seven times. One by one, the residents of my busti ducked out of their huts. Bangles jangled on the women's wrists.. The men puffed on their cheroots and coiled head cloths around their heads.The life is hard, but the bonds of friendship and family within the impoverished busti make life bearable, even enjoyable. Basanta is a good and generally obedient girl, but prone to clever scheming. When she becomes the unlikely possessor of an expensive ring, a plan forms in her mind. In practice, however, it turns out much differently than she expected! Spanning only a few weeks, the story ends on a hopeful note during Divali, The Festival of Lights.
The line at the water tap was already getting long and Rukmani was at the front of it, filling her pretty clay pots. I ducked my head and walked by quietly I didn't want to be peppered with questions about life at the Big House: "How many fluffy pillows on Little Bibi's bead, hanh? How many ribbons for Little Bibi's hair? How many eggs on Little Bibi's breakfast plate? Come, tell me, na?"
Child of Spring is a sometimes predictable story, but its strength lies in the rich cultural detail of life in Basanta's community, and in the joy the residents find in life's small pleasures.
A Glossary of Indian terms and expressions is included.
From the publisher:
F&P (Fountas & Pinnell)
F&P Level: U
F&P Grade: 5
Read an excerpt of Child of Spring here.
Blog: American Indians in Children's Literature (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #WeNeedDiverseBooks, #StepUpScholastic, Scholastic, Add a tag
I have a lot of thoughts in my head this morning, about yesterday's #StepUpScholastic chat on Twitter, and about the Step Up Scholastic campaign, but I am starting with this:
Stone Fox is in 10 bks/$10 box |
When I saw the first page of the flyer, I wasn't happy at all to see Stone Fox on it. That book has stereotyping of Native peoples in it, and as such, is the opposite of what kids need if they're to 1) see mirrors of who they are, or 2) see accurate depictions of those who are unlike themselves. With that book on there, Scholastic and WNDB are marketing a problematic book. Stone Fox is in the 10 BOOKS FOR $10 box on bottom right of the flyer shown here.
Late yesterday, Scholastic announced an expansion of its partnership with We Need Diverse Books. They're going to do eight flyers this year. Will these flyers have Stone Fox? Will they have books by Native writers? When I looked inside last year's flyer, I saw two books by Joseph Bruchac, but that's not enough.
Last year's partnership, and this expansion of that partnership, are steps in the right direction but if Scholastic is seriously committed to diversity and providing children with books that truly education--rather than ones that miseducate children about Native peoples--here's what they need to do (saying they in this post but I know Scholastic is reading this, so I could say YOU instead):
- Acquire more books by Native writers and put those books in the flyers, all year long, not just in the special flyers about diversity. And on the teacher webpages. And in book fairs. Maximize the distribution, here and around the globe, too. Last night I learned a little about the flyers you publish around the globe. You're exporting stereotypes. That has to stop.
- Seek out books by Native writers--books published by other publishers--and get them into the flyers. Do it now. Today. I understand there's "rights" issues associated with all this but also think that your billion+ revenue could be leveraged somehow to make this happen. Get them in the diversity flyers but in all flyers. Like I said above: all year round. Every grade level. Every month.
- Remove books that misrepresent Native peoples from all flyers and from their website, too. There's absolutely no reason to continue to market Island of the Blue Dolphins. Or Hiawatha (the one by Susan Jeffers). Or Touching Spirit Bear. Or Sign of the Beaver. Or The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses. Or Julie of the Wolves. Or Indian in the Cupboard. Those are some of the books you distribute. STOP. And I know there are others, too.
- Take some of that billion dollar revenue and hire people with expertise---not just in kidlit---but in Native Studies, to help you with all these tasks. I'm not asking you to hire me. But I think I can help you find people who would work with you. All this money you're making, right here on what used to be Native lands... come on. Step Up.
Ebony Elizabeth Thomas has been doing some writing about distinctions between marketing, advocacy, and activism that I find helpful as we all live through these periods of fighting for change in what we get from the publishing industry. The Scholastic flyers are marketing. I think it is marketing borne from activism, but as I noted above, there's a lot more to do with what Scholastic publishes, and what they choose to market.
Some people think I hate Scholastic. Some people think I hate white people. Neither is true. Last night I did a series of tweets about how much I love Shadowshaper and If I Ever Get Out of Here. I wanna see several of the people who made those two books possible, working in-house at Scholastic, getting us more books like that.
I'll be waiting to see the new flyers. Not just the diversity ones. Every single one. They are a way to measure what Scholastic is doing. Doing content analyses of the flyers provide us with a way to test what Scholastic is doing. The flyers, as I view them, are a test that--if passed--could win back the trust they've lost.
Blog: Shelf-employed (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: diversity, Newbery, Caldecott, J, grandmothers, E, urban life, #weneeddiversebooks, Add a tag
In 2008, librarians surprised everyone by choosing the 533-page, The Invention of Hugo Cabret as the winner of the Caldecott Medal honoring the "most distinguished American picture book for children." This year, the award committees surprised us again with the choice of a picture book, Last Stop on Market Street, as the winner of the Newbery Medal, given to "to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children."
The short video below featuring author, Matt de la Peña, reading from his book will convince you that this is a wonderful book.
My concern as a public librarian, however, is how best to share this book with kids. The book is a little lengthy for my usual storytime crowd, and school-aged kids can seldom be convinced to check out a picture book. It's in instances like these, that I envy school teachers and media specialists, who have such a wonderful opportunity to share great books with large numbers of kids. This is perfect book for reading aloud in school.
But, how to share it in a public library setting?
Last week, I had a last-minute inspiration and it was a rewarding experience. I have a small book club that meets every month. This month, I asked each of the kids to read Last Stop on Market Street - right then. In addition to positive comments about the book, I loved two of the observations that they reported:
- I never would have chosen this book if you didn't hand it to me.
- The people at the soup kitchen look like regular people.
One of the missions of the #WeNeedDiverseBooks (TM) campaign is to make sure that "all children can see themselves in the pages of a book." This is important, but also important is recognizing that all people are just "regular people." We always have more in common than we think.
Last Stop on Market Street
by Matt de la Peña, Illustrated by Christian Robinson
Read it. Share it.
**Winner of the 2016 Newbery Medal**A 2016 Caldecott Honor Book**A 2016 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor BookA New York Times BestsellerFour Starred ReviewsFinalist for the 2014 E.B. White Read-aloud Book AwardA Junior Library Guild Selection
Blog: The Book of Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #weneeddiversebooks, #Readukkah, Add a tag
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I love the respectful description of deafness, the fact that Bayla has knowledge to offer as well as a need for help, and the sign language diagrams at the back along with the notation that “Users of sign language actually prefer gloves to mittens, as they employ their fingers to spell words and to sign.” That seems obvious once you read it, but a hearing person may not think about this in a mitten-focused story.
Blog: The Book of Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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It all started with Marjorie Ingall’s Tablet article, Enough with the Holocaust Books for Children. As she says in the article, "if you dropped an alien into the children’s section of a library, it would think Jews disappeared after World War II.” Then Arthur A. Levine shared Marjorie’s article on Facebook, commenting that “this smart article says many things that I’ve been saying for a while.” Twenty comments later, Elissa Gershowitz and Yael Levy had thoroughly discussed the difficulties and triumphs of getting NON-Holocaust books for kids published, and Barbara Bietz and I (blogger and podcaster, respectively) had started wondering aloud how we could bring more attention to these issues. Thus, this podcast episode was born.
AUDIO:
Or click Mp3 File (63:19)
BOOK LIST of mostly non-Holocaust great Jewish kidlit
(titles mentioned during the podcast or submitted later by panelists)
CREDITS:
Produced by: Feldman Children's Library at Congregation B'nai Israel
Supported in part by: Association of Jewish Libraries
Theme music: The Freilachmakers Klezmer String Band
Facebook: facebook.com/bookoflifepodcast
Twitter: @bookoflifepod
Support The Book of Life by becoming a patron at Patreon.com/bookoflife!
Your feedback is appreciated! Please write to [email protected] or call our voicemail number at 561-206-2473.
Gina organizes the book fair at our daughters' school. Moved by #WeNeedDiverseBooks, she wanted the school's book fair to become a vehicle to bring local awareness to the movement, as well as a space where our community could find windows and mirrors within every book. We curated a list of books with the help of the resources at weneeddiversebooks.org and from the teachers' input. The Odyssey Bookshop, a great local indie, handled sales. We are lucky enough to live in a community where we were able to invite authors Lisa Yee, Heidi Stemple and Rich Michelson in to read and sign books. This is something that anybody can do regardless of their proximity to authors. You don't even need a husband who can design a fancy logo. (In fact, I am giving that logo to WNDB for some exciting things.) There was so much good that came from this. We were able to connect our kids to some great books. And at our dinner table at home, we were able to talk about what diversity means and why it's so important.
Blog: Cheryl Rainfield: Avid Reader, Teen Fiction Writer, and Book-a-holic. Focus on Children & Teen Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: YA books, yaauthor, asthma, Cheryl Rainfield, yalit, YAsaves, diversityinYA, YA Saves, Parallel Visions, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, CherylRainfield, yabooks, ireadYA, booknerdigans, AvaJae, booknerds, chronicillness, Add a tag
I LOVE this post by #YAlit author Ava Jae On The Lack of Chronic Illness Rep In YA, and I’m honored that she included Parallel Visions in her list. We need to change the message that’s out there in YA lit for chronically ill teens: that their stories are only worth telling if they die or have a miracle cure. Chronically ill kids and teens can be heroes in their own right. I wrote Parallel Visions after getting asthma. It’s terrifying to feel like you can’t breathe. But chronic disease has nothing to do with us being strong, intelligent, empathic beings who can be heroes and have adventures, too.
Read her fantastic post, book suggestions, and reader comments on more book suggestions.
Blog: Welcome to my Tweendom (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: folklore, Caribbean, supernatural, creepy, #weneeddiversebooks, Algonquin Young Readers, recommendation from a friend, family, Friendship, Add a tag
I will be booktalking this one as soon as we go back to school!
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: diversity, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, #LA15SCBWI, Nicola Yoon, Add a tag
Nicola Yoon grew up in Jamaica (the island) and Brooklyn (part of Long Island). She currently resides in Los Angeles with her husband and their daughter, both of whom she loves beyond all reason. Her first novel, Everything, Everything, will be published by Random House\Delacorte Press on September 1, 2015. Follow her on Twitter @nicolayoon.
Here's the synopsis of Nicola's book:
Madeline Whittier is allergic to the outside world. So allergic, in fact, that she has never left the house in all of her seventeen years. She is content enough—until a boy with eyes the color of the Atlantic Ocean moves in next door. Their complicated romance begins over IM and grows through a wunderkammer of vignettes, illustrations, charts, and more.
Highlights of Nicola's comments:
"The job of a writer is to tell the truth. To see people as they are."
Miranda asks Nicola about having a character with a serious disease, and at the same time being of mixed heritage.
"The story is about her, she's not the sidekick."
A book about the diversity (like coming out stories) can be "incredibly important."
And, Nicola says, "a non-issue book is just as important."
"If Harry Potter were black, that would be awesome. Or if he were gay."
Nicola speaks of what happens when you have only one of a category of people.
When you have only one black or gay character, then they become representative of that category. If you have only one character who is black and they're a drug dealer, that can be problematic. But if you have ten characters who are black, it's not so troubling. Because that one character is no longer a representative of everyone who is part of that category, too.
"No one represents everyone."
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: diversity, Varian Johnson, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, #LA15SCBWI, Add a tag
Author Varian Johnson gave a great keynote earlier today, be sure you check out the recap for that, too. As a reminder, his books include The Great Greene Heist and My Life as a Rhombus.
When asked about writers needing to ask permission to write about a character of a different background or orientation, etc., Varian says asking for permission is hard, it's not like one person represents the totality of their race or disability or sex. I struggle with this a lot myself, when I'm writing a female character.
Do a lot of research, get the technical things right, interactions within the community. Growing up, I spoke one way at home, and one way out in the world, and that would be hard for someone who didn't experience my private home life to observe.
I don't expect any author to ask permission, but I do expect an author to do their research and due diligence on a subject, any subject.
Miranda Paul, the moderator, asks about the term 'casual diversity' and what the panel thinks of it.
Varian says, "Casual diversity is a horrible term, we struggled with it a lot, but I think there is something to be said for books that feature the race of a character, but race isn't the point of the story. I love the idea that there are books coming out now where people of color can be more than one thing."
He mentions Elizabeth Bluemle's post about looking for the black Ramona Quimby.
A final note of career advice from Varian: Think through who is publishing and where you and your story may fit, find your allies, they are out there.
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Kwame Alexander, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, #NY15SCBWI, #WNDB, diversity, Add a tag
It was announced this week that Kwame Alexander won the 2015 Newbery Award for his middle grade novel, The Crossover!
Kwame is a poet and author of eighteen books, including Acoustic Rooster and His Barnyard Band (The 2014 Michigan Reads One Book Selection), He Said, She Said (a Junior Library Guild Selection.) He is the founder of Book-in-a-Day, a student-run publishing program that has created more than 3,000 student authors; and LEAP for Ghana, an international literacy project that builds libraries, trains teachers, and empowers children through literature. The Kwame Alexander Papers, a collection of his writings, is held at the George Washington University Gelman Library.
The room is PACKED for Kwame Alexander.
He has us cracking up, telling us about finding time to write and balancing that with spending time with his family.
If we want to write diverse characters, we've got to READ books with diverse characters.
He addresses the fear of being disrespectful, people who say they don't know any diverse people so they can't write that. He says we write books about zombies and vampires and we don't know any of them. It's a cop out to say we don't know diverse characters.
He reads some amazing poems/passages from his Newbery Award-winning THE CROSSOVER, asking us questions about what we know about the character, and why? Is the character Black? Why do we think so? How do we separate out the author from the work?
He shares that a teacher contacted him, saying she needed to know the race of the main character before book-talking The Crossover to her students. He said why? She said the kids were going to ask her. He didn't tell her, but said, let me know if they ask.
The kids never asked.
The problem is not the kids reading the books. The problem is us. In the way we are writing and the way our perceptions color our books.
"We have to change our way of thinking of diversity."
He speaks of bringing the power of words and stories to children in other countries. Of his six trips to Ghana, and the 200 children in a village who had never seen a book with a Black character in it before he visited them.
Kwame calls up Pam Allyn of LitWorld, who shares a story of children in a rural village. She took a photo of them, and then showed them the image - and they had no idea which child they were in the photo. Because in their village, they had no mirrors, no glass, no reflections - they didn't know what they looked like. The power of being able to see themselves in a book is so powerful! Children need mirrors.
Kwame talks about the assumptions about the color of a character based on the book's author if its not called out otherwise, and he tells us to "be bold!"
Assert our vision.
He shares a great list of seven tips and wisdom, including these two:
#3. Be Authentic
(You don't have to make a big thing out of the diverse characters and elements, unless the story dictates that you make a big thing out of the diverse characters and elements.)
#7. Be intentional in your effort to write the kind of world you want your children to live, learn and love in.
Humble. Proud. Charming. Brilliant.
Kwame Alexander - awesome!
Blog: Biblio File (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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ALA's Youth Media Awards are always an exciting day for those who love youth literature. This is when the big prizes (Newbery! Caldecott! Printz! more!) are announced.
There are several specialized awards, such as the Coretta Scott King awards for books by African-Americans about the African-American Experience, and there has been some worry that these awards "ghetto-ize" books by diverse authors. While committees can't explicitly take it into consideration, are books by diverse authors unintentionally overlooked for the bog awards because oh, they'll just win the other one, that's "for them"?
Not today. Not today. Not today. It was SO EXCITING to see overlap between the awards and see so much diversity recognized and celebrated. Let's hope this isn't a one-year change, but long-term one.
Here are some of the diverse titles awarded today Caveats: I'm only listing books where diversity wasn't a criteria, so I'm not listing winners of the Schneider Family Award, Coretta Scott King awards, Pura Bel Pre, Stonewall, or Batchelder because listing all of them inflates the numbers. Many of the books listed also won these awards though, because they're awesome books. I may have also missed a few titles.
The Crossover by Kwame Alexander
El Deafo by Cece Bell
Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson
Viva Frida by Yuyi Morales, photographs by Tim O'Meara
This One Summer by Mariko Tamaki, illustrated by Jillian Tamaki
I'll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson
Josephine: The Dazzling Life of Josephine Baker by Patricia Hruby Howell, illustrated by Christian Robinson
H.O.R.S.E.: A Game of Basketball and Imagination by Christopher Myers, narrated by Dion Graham and Christopher Myers (yes, I know this links to the book. It won for audio, but Amazon doesn't seem to carry it)
Five, Six, Seven, Nate! written and narrated by Tim Federle
Separate Is Never Equal: Sylvia Mendez and Her Family's Fight for Desegregation by Duncan Tonatiuh
Gabi, a Girl in Pieces by Isabel Quintero
Popular: Vintage Wisdom for a Modern Geek by Maya Van Wagenen
Laughing at My Nightmare by Shane Burcaw
The Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny, and the Fight for Civil Rights by Steve Sheinkin
Bingo's Run: A Novel by James A Levine
Confessions by Kanae Minato, translated from the Japanese by Stephen Snyder
Everything I Never Told You: A Novel by Celeste Ng
The Terrorist's Son: A Story of Choice by Zak Ebrahim with Jeff Giles
AND! In addition to the books, the 3 authors honored were... Donald Crews, Sharon M. Draper, and Pat Mora.
It's an awesome list, no?
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Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #WeNeedDiverseBooks, diverse books, latino christmas, Chicano Christmas, latino authors, Add a tag
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Blog: Biblio File (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: picture books, book lists, Hanukkah, #weneeddiversebooks, Add a tag
Hanukkah's coming! And here begins my annual hunt for a Hanukkah book that's written for Jewish children. See, many, many Hanukkah books are actually written for non-Jews, to explain this crazy holiday. Jewish children don't need to be told what a menorah or latke is. They know. They want stories about crazy Hanukkah hijinks and there just aren't that many. (Also, you really don't need *that* many books about the miracle of the oil.) Here are a few of my favorites:
The Borrowed Hanukkah Latkes by Linda Glaser, illustrated by Nancy Cote
As the Hanukkah party guest list keeps growing, Rachel's mom keeps sending her next door to borrow more latke ingredients, chairs, and other necessary items. Rachel keeps inviting Mrs. Greenberg to come to the party, but she just won't come! How can Rachel help spread the Hanukkah joy?
The Chanukkah Guest by Eric A. Kimmel, illustrated by Giora Carmi
I love this hilarious tale about a Bubba who thinks she's inviting the rabbi in to eat her latkes, only to discover she's fed them all to a hungry bear! (Sadly out-of-print)
The Ugly Menorah written and illustrated by Marissa Moss
Rachel doesn't understand why her grandmother insists on using her ugly, old menorah. But then grandma tells her how, when she and Rachels recently-passed grandpa were first married, they didn't have money to buy a menorah and so grandpa made the old, ugly, one. (Also sadly out-of-print)
Biscuit's Hanukkah by Alissa Capucilli, illustrated by Pat Schories
Mostly because I get excited to find a series character who's obligatory holiday book is about Hanukkah, not Christmas.
Which ones would you add?
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Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: WIP, new stories, Chicano lit, SF/F, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, Chicano Author, latino speculative literature, Add a tag
--> I'm sapped. By election results, doctors' ignorance about strange pains that I might go half-Stephen-Hawking about, and from not having gotten really drunk in over a month.
What the children would create in Anahuac |
Non-Diné image of Diné entity |
What Chaneco tumbled down |
Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #WeNeedDiverseBooks, Lorie Ann Grover, Melissa Walker, matt de la pena, rgz newsflash, Add a tag
Have you checked out the indiegogo for #WeNeedDiverseBooks? Matt de la Pena is such a great spokesman.
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/we-need-diverse-books
Diverse Campaign w Thanks Card from Undercurrent on Vimeo.
Here's what diva Melissa Walker recommends to encourage progress:
1. Request diverse books at your local library and bookstore. Make sure your booksellers and librarians know that you want to read about people from various backgrounds.
2. Join the Twitter activism with#WeNeedDiverseBooks -- the conversation is buzzing daily (onTumblr too).
3. Support the indiegogo campaign (video above, starring favorite authors like John Green, Matt de la Peña and Jacqueline Woodson) to help keep the movement growing.
One Founder of the movement, author Ellen Oh, explained to NPR, "We need the representation, but we also need white kids to read about us, to recognize us, and not push us off into the other...not to think of us as exotic or being so very different." Follow the hashtagand the tumblr to hear some powerful stories.
Even donating to the cause, less than a latte, can help the campaign. Think about it, rgz. As Matt says, "Books are mirrors and windows."
Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Unsung Heroes, Women's History, Newbery, Kirby Larson, historical fiction, School Librarians, Girl Heroes, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, Add a tag
KL – Thanks, Janet! It’s an honor to visit with you. And I am so delighted about the NAPPA award, as well as the two starred reviews, for my new book.
JLC - Tell us what inspired you to write Dash.
JLC – Would you tell us a bit about your research, and give us a peek into your writing process?
As for my writing process, it is a huge mess! I just jump in and start writing – no outline. No plan. What I do first, however, is get to know my character as thoroughly as possible. My work is very character driven.
KL- I am thrilled this conversation is taking place. Children need to see themselves – deserve to see themselves! -- in literature of all kinds. I do have a worry, however, that “diversity” could come to mean only ethnicity. It would be a shame to set such limits.
I’ve said this elsewhere: as a kid who grew up wearing hand me downs and sometimes finding the kitchen cupboards completely bare, I would have died and gone to heaven had I found books like Barbara O’Connor’s How to Steal a Dog or Janet Lee Carey’s The Double Life of Zoe Flynn, in which the main character is homeless. I hope and pray this #WeNeedDiverseBooks campaign leads to an even richer and broader range of the kinds of kid characters and stories we’ll see in children’s and young adult literature.
JLC— What would you like readers to take away from this book?
KL – I want readers to take away their own meaning from all of my books. But if Dash made readers stop and think about what it means to be a decent human being, I wouldn’t mind that one bit.
By Kirby Larson
Scholastic, 10/2014
Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #WeNeedDiverseBooks, Latino/a Rising, Daniel Jose Older, latino speculative literature, Junot Díaz, chicano literature, Kathleen Alcalá, #DiversityInSFF, Add a tag
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On Thursday, bloguista Ernesto Hogan's posted Chicanonautica: Latino/a Rising about the prospective publication, Latino/a Rising, called "the first collection of U.S. Latino/a science fiction, fantasy, and other speculative genres."
Editor Matthew David Goodwin already accepted stories by Kathleen Alcalá, Ana Castillo, Junot Díaz, Ernesto Hogan, Daniel José Older and Sabrina Vourvoulias, among others. If I can cut a story of mine down, and it makes the cut, the anthology will include my cross-genre Chicano/Mexica/alien/Diné SF/F/folklore tale, whose title doesn't matter yet. But even if mine doesn't make the cut, the anthology deserves and needs more support, not only mine.
Latino/a Rising currently has 66 Backers who've pledged $2,553 of the $10,000needed to reach their goal. Only 14 days remain. Thus, this first-time Latino publication will happen only with more backers. With your support, whoever and whatever you are.
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #WeNeedDiverseBooks, diversity, Adriana Dominguez, Sharon Flake, Add a tag
Sharon Flake is the multi-award-winning author including The Skin I'm In, Money Hungry, Begging for Change, and many others.
Sharon went to the library and read a lot as a kid, but she says, "My first books were my parents. My parents told me stories about family and situations and they showed me that I was okay."
Disliked stereotype: That black fathers are absent.
Sharon believes that hopefully with all this discussion about diversity, people will start to come up with different models and ways of doing things.
Sharon has been telling diverse students that they have a seat at the table (in writing, marketing, publishing). She hopes we all help to make sure that comes true.
Adriana Dominguez is an agent with Full Circle Literary agency with a commitment to getting diverse books published.
Adriana hears from readers (at conferences) that they have not read a book with someone like them in it until college. This is the reason Adriana does what she does and is so passionate about it.
There's been a profound change in submissions, though there still are those that approach culture as food, etc. Now, Adriana sees books that approach the culture at a much greater depth in ways they haven't in the past.
Disliked stereotype: That all Latinas move the same.
Adriana likes to tell editors and agents to advertise their interest in diversity in books. She gets a lot of diverse submissions because she advertises her interest in getting them.
Lee & Low Books sponsors the New Voices Award which is given to an author of color with a promising manuscript which has launched many careers and books which have gone on to win awards.
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: #WeNeedDiverseBooks, diversity, Linda Sue Park, Add a tag
Linda Sue Park |
A SINGLE SHARD. A recent title, A LONG WALK TO WATER, is a New York Times bestseller, and her picture book XANDA'S PANDA PARTY received three starred reviews. She's a master of both forms.
In 2003, Linda Sue was asked by School Library Journal to list three children's books that had meant a lot to her when she was a child. One of the books had an African hero, one had an African American boy as a hero, and the third was set in India. It had been 40 years since she'd read them, but the came back to her immediately.
"What these books showed me was that you didn't have to be white to be a hero."
Linda Sue thinks anybody can and should be able to write about anybody or anything. But not all viewpoints are created equal. "If you are a member of the minority group, you are intimate with the dominant culture," she said. "You live in it. The reverse isn't necessarily true."
To write about something, you need a "passionate, personal stake" in it. Study a culture deeply. Learn a language (one writer she knows has learned 14 languages in the course of his research). There might be months or years of research into the culture, where you immerse yourself in it. Good intentions don't go deep enough. Not researching enough demonstrates a lack of respect. "That is what you are doing if you are not putting the time and the work and the passion into the story you want to tell."
When we write incorrectly about cultures, people feel disrespected, and readers get wrong information in their heads—and sometimes this wrong information never comes out.
Also, when it comes to the sales potential of books with non-white characters, Linda Sue doesn't buy the notion that non-white people aren't a viable market. If they're not reading, then they are a huge, untapped market.
"Go hire whoever marketed 'Dora the Explorer,'" she said.
She had a plea for people who've read a diverse book they like: Even if you can't buy it, tell a librarian you loved it. That librarian will buy it and tell others, and that will really help a book succeed.
Learn more about Linda Sue Park
Follow her on Twitter
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Meg Medina is an award-winning author of picture books, middle grade and YA fiction. Her work examines how cultures intersect through the eyes of young people. Her latest is the Pura Belpre Award and the 2014 CYBILS Award for fiction, "Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass."
Meg speaks of how, growing up, she was embarrassed by her mother's accent. What helped turn that around for her, and helped her believe she could be an author?
She was 20 when she read Sandra Cisneros' "The House on Mango Street" and it came as a shock - to see people who looked like her aunt and mother, people eating what her family ate. Realizing that they were worthy of a story "gave me permission to tell the stories I could take from my own life… and re-work into fiction."
She also shares that if you're outside a culture and writing about that culture, it's important to have people of the culture read your work to make sure you have "real people in your novel who we care about, not plastic."
There's lots more discussed, from the over-sexualized stereotype of Latina women to Publishers' approaches to finding new voices and diverse stories.
An excellent and important discussion!
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