BLACK GIRL POWER: 15 STORIES CELEBRATING BLACK GIRLHOOD with Renée Watson gets a starred Kirkus review

Acclaimed authors share 15 diverse stories that showcase the strength and humanity of Black girls who are facing a variety of challenges.

This anthology, composed of stand-alone entries, spans multiple genres, including realistic fiction, fabulism, and fantasy. Readers meet middle school girls who are dealing with universal issues, such as family expectations, grief and loss, friendship troubles, bullying, and fear of rejection, plus some that are specific to being a Black girl. The stories overwhelmingly refute monolithic stereotypes, instead celebrating the girls’ creative problem-solving, sense of humor, openness to learning and growth, strong family and community relationships, and powers of imagination. Some authors tell stories of ordinary moments that are transformed by courage, as in “The New Rules” by Elise Bryant, “An Aria for Abi” by Tọlá Okogwu, “The Sleepover” by Kekla Magoon, and “Rice & Beans, Rhythm & Beats” by Ibi Zoboi. Others tell stories that take place in intriguing settings, like “First Bite” by Dhonielle Clayton and “Crème de la Crème” by Roseanne A. Brown. Whether the subject matter is serious, as in Sharon M. Draper’s “The Last Chocolate Cookie,” mysterious, as in Natasha Díaz’s “One of Those Days,” or heartwarming, as in Kalynn Bayron’s “Auntie Ro,” each chapter is a gift for readers to discover. The empowering messages of self-acceptance are perfectly encapsulated in Renée Watson’s powerful poem “Black Girl, Be.”

Electric: bequeaths confidence-building stories that sizzle with wisdom and a little bit of magic.

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Michelle Meadows’ FLYING HIGH: FLYING HIGH: THE STORY OF GYMNASTICS CHAMPION, SIMONE BILES in the NYT: “These Children’s Books Will Get You in the Olympic Spirit”

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THE DANGER OF SMALL THINGS by Caryl Lewis sells to Atheneum