a celebration of identity

323
A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in Children’s and Young Adult Literature prepared by Jane M. Gangi, PhD (email: [email protected]) for the Summit Building a Bridge to Literacy for African American Male Youth The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill June 3-5, 2012

Upload: phamhanh

Post on 13-Feb-2017

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: A Celebration of Identity

A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Children’s and Young Adult Literature

prepared by Jane M. Gangi, PhD

(email: [email protected])

for the Summit

Building a Bridge to Literacy for African American Male Youth

The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

June 3-5, 2012

Page 2: A Celebration of Identity

Picture Books

Biographies

Page 3: A Celebration of Identity

Doreen Rappaport and Bryan Collier’s Martin’s Big Words: The Life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Page 4: A Celebration of Identity

Christine Farris and Chris Soentpiet’s

My Brother Martin: A Sister Remembers Growing Up with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Page 5: A Celebration of Identity

Jim Haskins, Kathleen Benson, and Benny Andrews’s John Lewis in the Lead: A Story of the Civil Rights Movement

Page 6: A Celebration of Identity

Eloise Greenfield and George Ford’s Paul Robeson

Page 7: A Celebration of Identity

Roslyn Jordan, Deloris Jordan, and Kadir Nelson’s Salt in His Shoes: Michael Jordan in Pursuit of a Dream

Page 8: A Celebration of Identity

Quincy Troupe and Lisa Cohen’s Little Stevie Wonder

Page 9: A Celebration of Identity

Charles R. Smith and Bryan Collier’s Twelve Rounds to Glory: The Story of Muhammad Ali

Page 10: A Celebration of Identity

Nikki Grimes and Bryan Collier’s Barack Obama: Son of Promise, Child of Hope

Page 11: A Celebration of Identity

Jane Halfmann and Duane Smith’s Seven Miles to Freedom: The Robert Smalls Story

Page 12: A Celebration of Identity

Crystal Hubbard and Robert McGuire’s The Last Black King of the Kentucky Derby

Page 13: A Celebration of Identity

Elizabeth MacLeod’s George Washington Carver: An Innovative Life

Page 14: A Celebration of Identity

Tony Medina and Jesse Joshua Watson’s I and I

Page 15: A Celebration of Identity

William Miller and Rodney S. Pate’s Joe Louis, My Champion

Page 16: A Celebration of Identity

Andrea Davis Pinkney and Brian Pinkney’s Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and His Orchestra

Page 17: A Celebration of Identity

Chris Raschka’s Charlie Parker Played Be Bop

Page 18: A Celebration of Identity

Gaylia Taylor and Frank Morrison’s George Crum and the Saratoga Chip

Page 19: A Celebration of Identity

Wendy Towle and Wil Clay’s The Real McCoy: The Life of an African-American Inventor

Page 20: A Celebration of Identity

Floyd Cooper’s Coming Home: From the Life of Langston Hughes

Page 21: A Celebration of Identity

Lesa Cline-Ransome and James Ransome’s Satchel Paige

Page 22: A Celebration of Identity

William Miller and R. Gregory Christie’s Richard Wright and the Library Card

Page 23: A Celebration of Identity

Lesa Cline-Ransome and James Ransome’s Young Pelé: Soccer’s First Star

Page 24: A Celebration of Identity

Lesa Cline-Ransome and James Ransome’s Major Taylor: Champion Cyclist

Page 25: A Celebration of Identity

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Raymond Obstfeld, Ben Boos, and A. G. Ford’s What Color Is My World? The Lost History of African American Inventors

Page 26: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers and Leonard Jenkins’s Malcolm X: A Fire Burning Brightly

Page 27: A Celebration of Identity

Lynne Barasch’s Knockin’ on Wood Starring Peg Leg Bates

Page 28: A Celebration of Identity

Robert Andrew Parker’s Piano Starts Here: The Young Art Tatum

Page 29: A Celebration of Identity

Kai Jackson Issa and Arthur L. Dawson’s Howard Thurman’s Great Hope

Page 30: A Celebration of Identity

Don Tate and R. Gregory Christie’s It Jes’ Happened: When Bill Traylor Started to Draw

Page 31: A Celebration of Identity

Crystal Hubbard and Kevin Belford’s Game Set Match Champion: Arthur Ashe

Page 32: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden and R. Gregory Christie’s The Champ: The Story of Muhammad Ali

Page 33: A Celebration of Identity

Yona Zeldis McDonough and Malcah Zeldis’s Peaceful Protest: The Life of Nelson Mandela

Page 34: A Celebration of Identity

Floyd Cooper’s Mandela: From the Life of the South African Statesman

Page 35: A Celebration of Identity

John Duggleby and Jacob Lawrence’s Story Painter: The Life of Jacob Lawrence

Page 36: A Celebration of Identity

Sharon Bell Mathis and George Ford’s Ray Charles

Page 37: A Celebration of Identity

Robert Burleigh and Marek Los’s Lookin’ for Bird in the Big City

Page 38: A Celebration of Identity

Carole Boston Weatherford and Sean Qualls’s Before John Was a Jazz Giant: A Song of John Coltrane

Page 39: A Celebration of Identity

David Wisniewski’s Sundiata: Lion King of Mali

Page 40: A Celebration of Identity

Kephra Burns, Leo and Diane Dillon’s Mansa Musa: The Lion of Mali

Page 41: A Celebration of Identity

Marie Bradby and Chris Soenpiet’s More Than Anything Else

Page 42: A Celebration of Identity

Picture Books

Contemporary Realistic Fiction

Page 43: A Celebration of Identity

Jeri Hanel Watts and Felicia Marshall’s Keepers

Page 44: A Celebration of Identity

John Steptoe and E. B. Lewis’s Creativity

Page 45: A Celebration of Identity

Natasha Tarpley and E. B. Lewis’s Joe-Joe’s First Flight

Page 46: A Celebration of Identity

Lucille Clifton and Ann Grifalconi’s Everett Anderson's Goodbye

Page 47: A Celebration of Identity

Edwidge Danticat and Alix Delinois’s Eight Days: A Story of Haiti

Page 48: A Celebration of Identity

Melrose Cooper and Nneka Bennett’s Getting’ Through Thursday

Page 49: A Celebration of Identity

Mary Hoffman and Karen Littlewood’s The Colour of Home

Page 50: A Celebration of Identity

Frané Lessac’s My Little Island

Page 51: A Celebration of Identity

Natasha Tarpley and E. B. Lewis’s Bippity Bob Barbershop

Page 52: A Celebration of Identity

Wade Hudson and George Ford’s Jamal’s Busy Day

Page 53: A Celebration of Identity

Brian Jordan, Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu’s I Told You I Can Play!

Page 54: A Celebration of Identity

Brian Pinkney’s Max Found Two Sticks

Page 55: A Celebration of Identity

Chris Raschka’s Yo! Yes!

Page 56: A Celebration of Identity

Irene Smalls-Hector and Michael Hays’s Jonathan and His Mommy

Page 57: A Celebration of Identity

Javaka Steptoe’s The Jones Family Express

Page 58: A Celebration of Identity

John Steptoe’s Stevie

Page 59: A Celebration of Identity

Mary Williams and R. Gregory Christie’s Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan

Page 60: A Celebration of Identity

Shane Evans’s Olu’s Dream

Page 61: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Woodson and James Ransome’s Visiting Day

Page 62: A Celebration of Identity

Youme’s Sélavi: A Haitian Story of Hope

Page 63: A Celebration of Identity

Nikki Grimes and Mike Benny’s Oh, Brother!

Page 64: A Celebration of Identity

Bryan Collier’s Uptown

Page 65: A Celebration of Identity

Jennifer Riesmeyer Elvgren and Nicole Tadgell’s Josias, Hold the Book

Page 66: A Celebration of Identity

Stephanie Stuve-Bodeen and Aaron Boyd’s Babu’s Song

Page 67: A Celebration of Identity

Tolowa Mollel and E. B. Lewis’s My Rows and Piles of Coins

Page 68: A Celebration of Identity

Cristina Kessler and Leonard Jenkins’s Best Beekeeper of Lalibela

Page 69: A Celebration of Identity

Elizabeth Alalou and Julie Klear Essakalli’s The Butter Man

Page 70: A Celebration of Identity

Clifton L. Taulbert and E. B. Lewis’s Little Cliff’s First Day of School

Page 71: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson and Rhonda Mitchell’s Daddy Calls Me a Man

Page 72: A Celebration of Identity

Wade Hudson and Peter Ambush’s It’s Church Going Time

Page 73: A Celebration of Identity

Denize Lauture and Jonathan Green’s Father and Son

Page 74: A Celebration of Identity

Jerdine Nolen and Kadir Nelson’s Hewitt Anderson’s Great Big Life

Page 75: A Celebration of Identity

G. Francis Johnson, Gail Johnson, & Dimitrea Tokunbo’s Has Anybody Lost a Glove?

Page 76: A Celebration of Identity

Picture Books

Historical Fiction

Page 77: A Celebration of Identity

Julius Lester and Jerry Pinkney’s The Old African

Page 78: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson and Loren Long’s I Dream of Trains

Page 79: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson’s and Loren Long’s Wind Flyers

Page 80: A Celebration of Identity

Andrea Davis Pinkney and J. Brian Pinkney’s Sit-In:

How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down

Page 81: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia McKissack and Leo and Diane Dillon’s Never Forgotten

Page 82: A Celebration of Identity

Deborah Hopkinson and Raúl Colón’s A Band of Angels: A Story Inspired by the Jubilee Singers

Page 83: A Celebration of Identity

William Miller and Charlotte Riley Webb’s Rent Party Jazz

Page 84: A Celebration of Identity

Margaree King Mitchell and James Ransome’s Uncle Jed’s Barbershop

Page 85: A Celebration of Identity

Shane W. Evan’s Underground: Finding the Light to Freedom

Page 86: A Celebration of Identity

Lorenzo Pace’s Jalani and the Lock

Page 87: A Celebration of Identity

Tim Tingle and Jeanne Rorex Bridges’ s Crossing Bok Chitto:

A Choctaw Tale of Friendship and Freedom

Page 88: A Celebration of Identity

Carol Boston Weatherford and Jerome Lagarrigue’s Freedom on the Menu: The Greensboro Sit-Ins

Page 89: A Celebration of Identity

Debbie A. Taylor and Frank Morrison’s Sweet Music in Harlem

Page 90: A Celebration of Identity

Richard Michelson and E. B. Lewis’s Happy Feet: The Savoy Ballroom Lindy Hoppers and Me

Page 91: A Celebration of Identity

Jacob Lawrence’s The Great Migration: An American Story

Page 92: A Celebration of Identity

Glenda Armand and Colin Bootman’s Love Twelve Miles Long

Page 93: A Celebration of Identity

Gavin Curtis and E. B. Lewis’s The Bat Boy and His Violin

Page 94: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers and Ann Grifalconi’s Patrol: An American Soldier in Vietnam

Page 95: A Celebration of Identity

Margot Theis Raven and Chris Ellison’s Let Them Play

Page 96: A Celebration of Identity

Toyomi Igus and Higgins Bond’s When I Was Little

Page 97: A Celebration of Identity

Graphic Novels

Page 98: A Celebration of Identity

Youme Landowne and Anthony Horton’s Pitch Black

Page 99: A Celebration of Identity

Greg Neri and Randy DuBurke’s Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty

Page 100: A Celebration of Identity

Andrew Helfer and Randy DuBurke’s Malcolm X: A Graphic Biography

Page 101: A Celebration of Identity

Poetry & Short Stories

Page 102: A Celebration of Identity

Paul Laurence Dunbar’s Jump Back Honey: The Poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar

Page 103: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s Here in Harlem: Poems in Many Voices

Page 104: A Celebration of Identity

Jeron Ashford Frame and R. Gregory Christie’s Yesterday I Had the Blues

Page 105: A Celebration of Identity

Gwendolyn Brooks and Faith Ringgold’s Bronzeville Boys and Girls

Page 106: A Celebration of Identity

Javaka Steptoe’s In Daddy’s Arms I Am Tall:

African Americans Celebrating Fathers

Page 107: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia A. Keeler and Júlio T. Leitão’s Drumbeat in Our Feet

Page 108: A Celebration of Identity

Greg Neri and Jesse Joshua Watson’s Chess Rumble

Page 109: A Celebration of Identity

Davida Adedjouma, and Gregory Christie’s The Palm of My Heart:

Poetry by African American Children

Page 110: A Celebration of Identity

Charles Sullivan’s Children of Promise:

African-American Literature and Art for Young People

Page 111: A Celebration of Identity

Ashley Bryan’s Ashley Bryan’s ABC of African American Poetry

Page 112: A Celebration of Identity

Alice Faye Duncan and Susan Keeter’s Honey Baby Sugar Child

Page 113: A Celebration of Identity

Karen English and Javaka Steptoe’s Hot Day on Abbott Avenue

Page 114: A Celebration of Identity

Lisa Wheeler and R. Gregory Christie’s Jazz Baby

Page 115: A Celebration of Identity

Cynthia Cotton and Javaka Steptoe’s Rain Play

Page 116: A Celebration of Identity

Langston Hughes and E. B. Lewis’s The Negro Speaks of Rivers

Page 117: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Harlem

Page 118: A Celebration of Identity

Langston Hughes and Romare Bearden’s The Block

Page 119: A Celebration of Identity

Langston Hughes and Brian Pinkney’s The Dreamkeeper and Other Poems

Page 120: A Celebration of Identity

Tony Medina and R. Gregory Christie’s Love to Langston

Page 121: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Jazz

Page 122: A Celebration of Identity

Willie Perdomo and Bryan Collier’s Visiting Langston

Page 123: A Celebration of Identity

Charles R. Smith’s Perfect Harmony:

A Musical Journey with the Boys’ Choir of Harlem

Page 124: A Celebration of Identity

Véronique Tadjo’s Talking Drums:

A Selection of Poems from Africa South of the Sahara

Page 125: A Celebration of Identity

Marilyn Nelson and Phillipe Lardy’s A Wreath for Emmett Till

Page 126: A Celebration of Identity

James Weldon Johnson and Bryan Collier’s Lift Every Voice and Sing

Page 127: A Celebration of Identity

Ntozake Shange and Kadir Nelson’s Ellington Was Not a Street

Page 128: A Celebration of Identity

Arnold Adoff’s I Am the Darker Brother:

An Anthology of Modern Poems by African Americans

Page 129: A Celebration of Identity

Sharon Flake’s You Don’t Even Know Me: Stories and Poems About Boys

Page 130: A Celebration of Identity

Tupac Shakur’s The Rose That Grew from Concrete

Page 131: A Celebration of Identity

Countee Cullen’s Caroling Dusk:

An Anthology of Verse by Black Poets of the Twenties

Page 132: A Celebration of Identity

Betsy Franco’s You Hear Me? Poems and Writing by Teenage Boys

Page 133: A Celebration of Identity

Informational Texts &

Visual Arts

Page 134: A Celebration of Identity

Katie Smith Milway and Eugenie Fernandes’s One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference

Page 135: A Celebration of Identity

Hill Harper’s Letters to a Young Brother:

Manifest Your Destiny

Page 136: A Celebration of Identity

Trish Marx and Ellen B. Sensi’s Steel Drumming at the Apollo:

The Road to Super Top Dog

Page 137: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden’s Wake Up Our Souls:

A Celebration of Black American Artists

Page 138: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden’s Tell All the Children Our Story:

Memories and Mementoes of Being Young and Black in America

Page 139: A Celebration of Identity

Virginia Hamilton and Leo and Diane Dillon’s Many Thousand Gone:

African-Americans from Slavery to Freedom

Page 140: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia McKissack and Frederick McKissack’s Rebels Against Slavery: American Slave Revolts

Page 141: A Celebration of Identity

Julius Lester and Rod Brown’s From Slave Ship to Freedom Road

Page 142: A Celebration of Identity

Russell Freedman’s Freedom Walkers:

The Story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott

Page 143: A Celebration of Identity

Tom Feelings’s The Middle Passage: White Ships/Black Cargo

Page 144: A Celebration of Identity

Jackie Napoleon Wilson’s Hidden Witness: African-American Images from the

Dawn of Photography to the Civil War

Page 145: A Celebration of Identity

Velma Maia Thomas’s No Man Can Hinder Me:

The Journey of Slavery to Emancipation Through Song

Page 146: A Celebration of Identity

Kephra Burns and William Miles’s Black Stars in Orbit: NASA’s African American Astronauts

Page 147: A Celebration of Identity

Michele Wood and Toyomi Igus’s i see rhythm

Page 148: A Celebration of Identity

Elizabeth Partridge’s Marching for Freedom:

Walk Together, Children, and Don’t You Grow Weary

Page 149: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia and Frederick McKissack and James Ransome’s Let My People Go: Bible Stories Told by a Freeman of Color to His Daughter, Charlotte, in Charleston, South Carolina,

1806-1816

Page 150: A Celebration of Identity

Michael L. Cooper’s Hell Fighters: African American Soldiers in World War I

Page 151: A Celebration of Identity

Michael L. Cooper’s The Double V Campaign: African Americans and World

War II

Page 152: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia McKissack and Fredrick McKissack’s Black Diamond: The Story of the Negro Baseball Leagues

Page 153: A Celebration of Identity

Casey King, Linda Barrett Osborne and Joe Brooks’s Oh, Freedom! Kids Talk About the Civil Rights Movement

with the People Who Made It Happen

Page 154: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Harris’s The Tuskegee Airmen: Black Heroes of World War II

Page 155: A Celebration of Identity

Kadir Nelson’s Heart and Soul:

The Story of America and African Americans

Page 156: A Celebration of Identity

Ellen Levine’s Freedom’s Children:

Young Civil Rights Activists Tell Their Own Stories

Page 157: A Celebration of Identity

John Middleton’s Africa: An Encyclopedia for Students

Page 158: A Celebration of Identity

Ifeoma Onyefulu’s Ikenna Goes to Nigeria

Page 159: A Celebration of Identity

Gilbert Ahiagble, Louise Meyer, and Nestor Hernandez’s The Master Weaver from Ghana

Page 160: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s Now Is Your Time! The African-American Struggle for Freedom

Page 161: A Celebration of Identity

Robert Mayer’s When the Children Marched:

The Birmingham Civil Rights Movement

Page 162: A Celebration of Identity

James Haskins’s The March on Washington

Page 163: A Celebration of Identity

Ann Bausum’s Freedom Riders: John Lewis and Jim Zwerg on the Front

Lines of the Civil Rights Movement

Page 164: A Celebration of Identity

Chris Crowe’s Getting Away with Murder:

The True Story of the Emmett Till Case

Page 165: A Celebration of Identity

Kadir Nelson’s We Are the Ship: The Story of the Negro League Baseball

Page 166: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden and Ansel Pitcairn’s Portraits of African-American Heroes

Page 167: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden’s Strong Men Keep Coming:

The Book of African American Men

Page 168: A Celebration of Identity

Screenplay/

Drama

Page 169: A Celebration of Identity

Caleen Sinette Jennings’s Free Like Br’er Rabbit

Page 170: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Monster

Page 171: A Celebration of Identity

Middle Grades Novels

Contemporary Realistic Fiction

Page 172: A Celebration of Identity

Frances Temple’s Grab Hands and Run

Page 173: A Celebration of Identity

Frances Temple’s A Taste of Salt: A Story of Modern Haiti

Page 174: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Woodson’s Peace, Locomotion

Page 175: A Celebration of Identity

Monalisa DeGross and Amy June Bates’s Donavan's Double Trouble

Page 176: A Celebration of Identity

Panise Hart Flood’s It’s Test Day, Tiger Turcotte

Page 177: A Celebration of Identity

Panise Hart Flood’s Tiger Turcotte Takes on the Know-it-All

Page 178: A Celebration of Identity

Sharon Draper’s Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs:

The Buried Bones Mystery

Page 179: A Celebration of Identity

Sharon Draper’s Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs:

The Buried Bones Mystery

Page 180: A Celebration of Identity

Sharon Draper’s Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs:

Lost in the Tunnel of Time

Page 181: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson’s Maniac Monkey's on Magnolia Street

Page 182: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson’s Maniac Monkey's on Magnolia Street

Page 183: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson’s When Mules Flew on Magnolia Street

Page 184: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia and Frederick McKissack’s Miami Gets It Straight

Page 185: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia and Frederick McKissack’s Miami Makes the Play

Page 186: A Celebration of Identity

Patricia and Frederick McKissack’s Miami Sees it Through

Page 187: A Celebration of Identity

Charisse K. Richardson’s The Real Slam Dunk

Page 188: A Celebration of Identity

Deborah Ellis’s Jakeman

Page 189: A Celebration of Identity

Middle Grade and Young Adult Novels

Historical Fiction

Page 190: A Celebration of Identity

Virginia Hamilton’s The House of Dies Drear

Page 191: A Celebration of Identity

Kekla Magoon’s The Rock and the River

Page 192: A Celebration of Identity

Joyce Hansen’s Which Way Freedom?

Page 193: A Celebration of Identity

Joyce Hansen’s Out from This Place

Page 194: A Celebration of Identity

Mildred D. Taylor’s The Well: David’s Story

Page 195: A Celebration of Identity

Mildred Taylor’s Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

Page 196: A Celebration of Identity

Christopher Paul Curtis’s The Watsons Go to Birmingham–1963

Page 197: A Celebration of Identity

Christopher Paul Curtis’s Bud, Not Buddy

Page 198: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s Fallen Angels

Page 199: A Celebration of Identity

Meja Mwangi’s The Mzungu Boy

Page 200: A Celebration of Identity

Sheila P. Moses’s The Legend of Buddy Bush

Page 201: A Celebration of Identity

Christopher Paul Curtis’s Elijah of Buxton

Page 202: A Celebration of Identity

Candy Dawson Boyd’s Chevrolet Saturdays

Page 203: A Celebration of Identity

Chapter Books Biographies and Autobiographies

Page 204: A Celebration of Identity

Sharon Robinson’s Jackie’s Nine

Page 205: A Celebration of Identity

Sampson Davis, George Jenkins, and Rameck Hunt’s We Beat the Street: How a Friendship Pact Led to Success

Page 206: A Celebration of Identity

Savion Glover and Bruce Weber’s Savion: My Life in Tap

Page 207: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden’s W. E. B. DuBois: A Twentieth-Century Life

Page 208: A Celebration of Identity

Chris Crowe’s Thurgood Marshall: A Twentieth-Century Life

Page 209: A Celebration of Identity

Myra Ribeiro’s The Assassination of Medgar Evers

Page 210: A Celebration of Identity

Jan Greenberg and Romare Bearden’s Paul Robeson

Page 211: A Celebration of Identity

Baba Wagué Diakité’s A Gift from Childhood: Memories of an African Childhood

Page 212: A Celebration of Identity

Mawi Asgedom’s Of Beetles and Angels:

A True Story of the American Dream

Page 213: A Celebration of Identity

Tonya Bolden and Bob Adelman’s M.L.K.: Journey of a King

Page 214: A Celebration of Identity

Larry Dane Brimmer’s We Are One: The Story of Bayard Rustin

Page 215: A Celebration of Identity

Leon Tillage and Susan L. Roth’s Leon’s Story

Page 216: A Celebration of Identity

Ann Parr and Kathryn Breidenthal’s Gordon Parks: No Excuses

Page 217: A Celebration of Identity

Manfred Weidhorn’s Jackie Robinson

Page 218: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s Bad Boy: A Memoir

Page 219: A Celebration of Identity

Alice Walker and Catherine Deeter’s Langston Hughes: American Poet

Page 220: A Celebration of Identity

Bonnie Hinman’s Benjamin Banneker:

American Mathematician and Astronomer

Page 221: A Celebration of Identity

Virginia Hamilton’s Anthony Burns:

The Defeat and Triumph of a Fugitive Slave

Page 222: A Celebration of Identity

Alex Simmons’s Ben Carson

Page 223: A Celebration of Identity

Folklore

Page 224: A Celebration of Identity

Julius Lester and Jerry Pinkney’s The Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit

Page 225: A Celebration of Identity

Baba Wagué Diakité’s The Hatseller and the Monkeys:

A West African Folktale

Page 226: A Celebration of Identity

Jerry Pinkney’s Aesop’s Fables

Page 227: A Celebration of Identity

Eboni Bynum, Roland Jackson and Baba Wagué Diakité’s Jamari’s Drum

Page 228: A Celebration of Identity

Won-Ldy Paye and Margaret H. Lippert’s Head, Body, Legs: A Story from Liberia

Page 229: A Celebration of Identity

Isaac O. Olaleye and Ann Grifalconi’s In the Rainfield: Who Is the Greatest?

Page 230: A Celebration of Identity

Tololwa Mollel and Linda Saport’s Subira, Subira

Page 231: A Celebration of Identity

Baba Wagué Diakité’s Mee-An and the Magic Serpent

Page 232: A Celebration of Identity

Concept &

Board Books

Page 233: A Celebration of Identity

Denize Lauture and Reynold Ruffins’s Running the Road to ABC

Page 234: A Celebration of Identity

Randy DuBurke’s Little Mister

Page 235: A Celebration of Identity

Dakari Hru’s Tickle Tickle

Page 236: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson and Rhonda Mitchell’s Joshua by the Sea

Page 237: A Celebration of Identity

Angela Johnson and Rhonda Mitchell’s Joshua’s Night Whispers

Page 238: A Celebration of Identity

Spike Lee, Tonya Lewis Lee and Kadir Nelson’s Please, Baby, Please

Page 239: A Celebration of Identity

Sandra and Myles Pinkney’s Shades of Black

Page 240: A Celebration of Identity

Novels in Verse

Page 241: A Celebration of Identity

Julius Lester’s Days of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue

Page 242: A Celebration of Identity

Marilyn Nelson’s Carver: A Life in Poems

Page 243: A Celebration of Identity

Hope Anita Smith and Shane W. Evans’s The Way a Door Closes

Page 244: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Woodson’s Locomotion

Page 245: A Celebration of Identity

Young Adult Literature

Classic and Contemporary

Page 246: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Woodson’s Miracle’s Boys

Page 247: A Celebration of Identity

Derrick Barne’s We Could Be Brothers

Page 248: A Celebration of Identity

B. A. Binns’s Pull

Page 249: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Woodson’s From the Notebooks of the Melanin Sun

Page 250: A Celebration of Identity

Claude Brown’s Manchild in the Promised Land

Page 251: A Celebration of Identity

August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone

Page 252: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s The Beast

Page 253: A Celebration of Identity

Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart

Page 254: A Celebration of Identity

Chinua Achebe’s Arrow of God

Page 255: A Celebration of Identity

James Baldwin’s Go Tell It on the Mountain

Page 256: A Celebration of Identity

James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time

Page 257: A Celebration of Identity

Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man

Page 258: A Celebration of Identity

August Wilson’s Fences

Page 259: A Celebration of Identity

Paul Volponi’s Black and White

Page 260: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s Lockdown

Page 261: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Autobiography of My Dead Brother

Page 262: A Celebration of Identity

Julian Houston’s New Boy

Page 263: A Celebration of Identity

Nikki Grimes’s Bronx Masquerade

Page 264: A Celebration of Identity

Jacqueline Woodson’s Behind You

Page 265: A Celebration of Identity

Richard Wright’s Native Son

Page 266: A Celebration of Identity

Richard Wright’s Rite of Passage

Page 267: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Mosley’s 47

Page 268: A Celebration of Identity

Young Adult Literature

Classic and Contemporary Informational Texts, Autobiographies and

Biographies

Page 269: A Celebration of Identity

David Walker’s David Walker’s Appeal to the Coloured Citizens

of the World

Page 270: A Celebration of Identity

W. E. B. DuBois’s The Souls of Black Folk

Page 271: A Celebration of Identity

Frederick Douglass’s Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American

Slave

Page 272: A Celebration of Identity

Booker T. Washington’s Up from Slavery

Page 273: A Celebration of Identity

Richard Wright’s Black Boy

Page 274: A Celebration of Identity

James Baldwin’s My Dungeon Shook:

Letter to My Nephew on the One Hundredth Anniversary of Emancipation

Page 275: A Celebration of Identity

Ben Carson’s Think Big

Page 276: A Celebration of Identity

Ben Carson’s The Big Picture:

Getting Perspective on What’s Really Important in Life

Page 277: A Celebration of Identity

Mark Mathabane’s Kaffir Boy in America: An Encounter with Apartheid

Page 278: A Celebration of Identity

Farrah Gray’s Reallionaire:

Nine Steps to Becoming Rich from the Inside Out

Page 279: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Dean Myers’s The Greatest: Muhammad Ali

Page 280: A Celebration of Identity

Alex Haley and Malcolm X’s The Autobiography of Malcolm X

Page 281: A Celebration of Identity

Miles Corwin’s And Still We Rise:

The Trials and Triumphs of Twelve Gifted Inner-City Students

Page 282: A Celebration of Identity

Alex Kotlowitz’s There Are No Children Here

Page 283: A Celebration of Identity

Carter G. Woodson’s The Mis-education of the Negro

Page 284: A Celebration of Identity

Walter Mosley’s Working on the Chain Gang:

Shaking Off the Dead Hand of History

Page 285: A Celebration of Identity

Anthony C. Davis and Jeffrey W. Jackson’s Yo, Little Brother:

Basic Rules of Survival for Young African American Males

Page 286: A Celebration of Identity

James Goodman’s Stories of Scottsboro

Page 287: A Celebration of Identity

LeAlan Jones, Llyod Newman and David Isay’s Our America:

Life and Death on the South Side of Chicago

Page 288: A Celebration of Identity

References Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem, Raymond Obstfeld, Ben Boos (Illus.), & A. G. Ford (Illus.). (2012). What color is my world? The lost history of African-American inventors. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press. Achebe, Chinua. (1994). Things fall apart. New York, NY: Anchor Books. (Original work published in 1959)

Achebe, Chinua. (1989). Arrow of God. New York, NY: Anchor Books. (Original work published in 1974)

Adedjouma, Davida, (Ed.), & Gregory Christie (Illus.). (1996). The palm of my heart: Poetry by African American children. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Adoff, Arnold. (20020. I am the darker brother: An anthology of modern poems by African Americans. New York, NY: Simon Pulse. (Original work published in 1968) Ahiagble, Gilbert, Louise Meyer, & Nestor Hernandez (Illus.). (1998). The master weaver from Ghana. Seattle, WA: Open Hand Publishing. Alalou, Elizabeth, & Julie Klear Essakalli (Illus.). (2008). The butter man. Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge.

Page 289: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Armand, Glenda, & Colin Bootman (Illus.). (2011). Love twelve miles long. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Asgedom, Mawi. (2001/2002). Of beetles and angels: A true story of the American dream. Boston, MA: Little, Brown. Baldwin, James. (2008). Go tell it on the mountain. Paw Prints. (Original work published in 1953) Baldwin, James. (1995). The fire next time. New York, NY: Vintage International. (Original work published in 1963) Baldwin, James. (1963). My dungeon shook: Letter to my nephew on the one hundredth anniversary of emancipation. Retrieved from http://www.valdosta.edu/~cawalker/baldwin.htm

Barasch, Lynne. (2004). Knockin’ on wood starring Peg Leg Bates. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Barnes, Derrick D. (2010). We could be brothers. New York, NY: Scholastic. Bausum, Ann. (2006). Freedom riders: John Lewis and Jim Zwerg on the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement. Washington, DC: National Geographic.

Page 290: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued

Binns, B. A. (2010). Pull. Lodi, NJ: WestSide Books.

Bolden, Tonya. (2008). W. E. B. DuBois: A twentieth-century life. New York, NY: Viking.

Bolden, Tonya. (2004). Wake up our souls: A celebration of black American artists. New York, NY: Abrams/Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Bolden, Tonya. (2001). Tell all the children our story: Memories and mementoes of being young and black in America. New York, NY: Abrams.

Bolden, Tonya. (1999). Strong men keep coming: The book of African American men. New York, NY: Wiley & Sons.

Bolden, Tonya, & Bob Adelman (Photographer). (2007). M.L.K.: Journey of a king. New York, NY: Abrams.

Bolden, Tonya, & R. Gregory Christie (Illus.). (2004). The champ: The story of Muhammad Ali. New York, NY: Knopf.

Page 291: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Bolden, Tonya, & Ansel Pitcairn (Illus.). (2003). Portraits of African-American heroes. New York, NY: Dutton. Boyd, Candy Dawson. (1993). Chevrolet Saturdays. New York, NY: Macmillan. Bradby, Marie, & Chris Soentpiet (Illus.). (1995). More than anything else. New York, NY: Orchard. Brimmer, Larry Dane. (2007). We are one: The story of Bayard Rustin. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills/Calkins Creek. Brooks, Gwendolyn, & Faith Ringgold (Illus.). (2007). Bronzeville boys and girls. New York, NY: Amistad. Brown, Claude. (1999). Manchild in the promised land. New York, NY: Touchstone. (Original work published in 1965) Bryan, Ashley. (1997). Ashley Bryan’s ABC of African American poetry. New York, NY: Atheneum. Burleigh, Robert, & Marek Los (Illus.). (2001). Lookin’ for bird in the big city. San Diego, CA: Harcourt.

Page 292: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Burns, Kephra, Leo & Diane Dillon (Illus.). (2001). Mansa Musa: The lion of Mali. San Diego, CA: Harcourt. Burns, Khephra, & William Miles. (1995). Black stars in orbit: NASA’s African American Astronauts. San Diego, CA: Harcourt. Bynum, Eboni, Roland Jackson, & Baba Wagué Diakité (Illus.). (2004). Jamari’s drum. Toronto, Canada: Groundwood/House of Anansi. Carson, Ben, with Gregg Lewis. (2000). The big picture: Getting a perspective on what’s really important in life. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan. Carson, Ben, with Cecil Murphey. (1992). Think big: Unleashing your potential for excellence. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing. Clifton, Lucille, & Ann Grifalconi (Illus.). (1988). Everett Anderson's goodbye. New York, NY: Holt.

Cline-Ransome, Lesa, & James Ransome (Illus.). (2007). Young Pelé: Soccer’s first star. New York, NY: Atheneum. Cline-Ransome, Lesa, & James Ransome (Illus.). (2004). Major Taylor: Champion cyclist. New York, NY: Atheneum.

Page 293: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Cline-Ransome, Lesa, & James Ransome (Illus.). (2000). Satchel Paige. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Collier, Bryan. (2000). Uptown. New York, NY: Holt. Cooper, Floyd. (1996). Mandela: From the life of the South African statesman. New York, NY: Philomel. Cooper, Floyd. (1994). Coming home: From the life of Langston Hughes. New York, NY: Putnam’s. Cooper, Melrose, & Nneka Bennett. (2000). Getting’ Through Thursday. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Cooper, Michael L. (1998). The double V campaign: African Americans and World War II. New York, NY: Lodestar. Cooper, Michael L. (1997). Hell fighters: African American soldiers in World War I. New York, NY: Lodestar. Corwin, Miles. (2000). And still we rise: The trials and triumphs of twelve gifted inner-city high school students. New York, NY: Morrow. Cotton, Cynthia, & Javaka Steptoe (Illus). (2008). Rain play. New York, NY: Holt.

Page 294: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Crowe, Chris. (2008). Thurgood Marshall: A twentieth-century life. New York, NY: Viking. Crowe, Chris. (2003). Getting away with murder: The true story of the Emmett Till case. New York, NY: Fogelman. Curtis, Christopher Paul. (2007). Elijah of Buxton. New York, NY: Scholastic. Curtis, Christopher Paul. (1999). Bud, not buddy. New York. NY: Delacorte. Curtis, Christopher Paul. (1995). The Watsons go to Birmingham–1963. New York, NY: Delacorte. Curtis, Gavin, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (1998). The bat boy and his violin. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Cullen, Countee (Ed.). (1998). Caroling dusk: An anthology of verse by Black poets of the twenties. New York, NY: Citadel. Danticat, Edwidge, & Alix Delinois (Illus.). (2010). Eight days: A story of Haiti. New York, NY: Orchard Books. Davis, Anthony C., & Jeffrey W. Jackson. (1998). Yo, little brother: Basic rules of survival for young African American males. Chicago, IL: African American Images.

Page 295: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued

Davis, Sampson, George Jenkins, & Rameck Hunt. (2005). We beat the street: How a friendship pact helped us succeed. New York, NY: Dutton. DeGross, Monalisa, & Amy June Bates (Illus.). Donovan’s double trouble. New York, NY: Amistad. Diakité, Baba Wagué. (2010). A gift from childhood: Memories of an African childhood. Toronto, Canada: Groundwood/House of Anansi. Diakité, Baba Wagué. (2007). Mee-An and the magic serpent. Toronto, Canada: Groundwood/House of Anansi. Diakité, Baba Wagué. (1999). The hatseller and the monkeys: A West African folktale. New York, NY: Scholastic. Draper, Sharon. (2007). Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs: Stars and sparks on stage. New York, NY: Aladdin. (Original work published in 2004) Draper, Sharon. (2006). Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs: The buried bones mystery. New York, NY: Aladdin. (Original work published in 1994) Draper, Sharon. (2006). Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs: Lost in the tunnel of time. New York, NY: Aladdin. (Original work published in 1996) Douglass, Frederick. (1960). Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass, an American slave. Cambridge, MA: Belknap. (Original work published in 1845)

Page 296: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued DuBois, W. E. B. (1993). The souls of Black folk. New York, NY: Knopf. (Original work published in 1903) DuBurke, Randy. (2006). Little mister. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. Duggleby, John, & Jacob Lawrence (Illus.). (1998). Story painter: The life of Jacob Lawrence. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle. Dunbar, Paul, & Ashley Bryan, Carole Byard, Jan Spivey Gilchrist, Brian Pinkney, Jerry Pinkney & Faith Ringgold (Illus.). (1999). Jump back honey: The poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar. New York, NY: Hyperion. Duncan, Alice Faye, & Susan Keeter (Illus.). (2005). Honey baby sugar child. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Ellis, Deborah. (2007). Jakeman. Toronto, Canada: Fitzhenry & Whiteside. Ellison, Ralph. (1995). Invisible man. New York, NY: Vintage International. (Original work published in 1952) Elvgren, Jennifer Riesmeyer. (2006). Josias, hold the book. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills.

Page 297: A Celebration of Identity

English, Karen, & Javaka Steptoe (Illus.). (2004). Hot day on Abbott Avenue. New York, NY: Clarion. Evans, Shane W. (2011). Underground: Finding the light to freedom. New York, NY: Roaring Brook Press. Evans, Shane W. (2009). Olu’s dream. New York, NY: Katherine Tegen Books. Farris, Christine King, & Chris Soentpiet (Illus.). (2003). My brother Martin: A sister remembers growing up with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Flake, Sharon. (2010). You don’t even know me: Stories and poems about boys. New York, NY: Hyperion/Jump at the Sun. Flood, Pansie Hart. (2005). Tiger Turcotte takes on the know it all. Minneapolis, MN: Carolrhoda. Flood, Pansie Hart. (2004). It’s test day, Tiger Turcotte. Minneapolis, MN: Carolrhoda. Frame, Jeron Ashford, & R. Gregory Christie (Illus.). (2003). Yesterday I had the blues. Berkeley, CA: Tricycle.

Page 298: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Franco, Betsy. (2000). You hear me? Poems and writing by teenage boys. Cambridge, MA: Candlewick Press. Freedman, Russell. (2006). Freedom walkers: The story of the Montgomery bus boycott. New York, NY: Holiday House. Glover, Savion, & Bruce Weber. (2000). Savion: My life in tap. New York, NY: Morrow. Goodman, James E. (1994). Stories of Scottsboro. New York, NY: Pantheon. Gray, Farrah. (2005). Reallionaire: Nine steps to becoming rich from the inside out. Deerfield Beach, FL: HCI. Greenberg, Jan, & Romare Bearden (Collage). (2003). Romare Bearden: Collage of memories. New York, NY: Harry Abrams. Greenfield, Eloise, & Jan Spivey Gilchrist (Illus.). (2011). The great migration: Journey to the north. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Greenfield, Eloise, & George Ford (Illus.). (2009). Paul Robeson. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. (Original work published in 1975)

Page 299: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued

Grimes, Nikki. (2002). Bronx masquerade. New York, NY: Dial Books. Grimes, Nikki, & Bryan Collier (Illus.). (2008). Barack Obama: Son of promise, child of hope. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Grimes, Nikki, & Mike Benny (Illus.). (2008). Oh, brother! New York, NY: HarperCollins/Amistad. Haley, Alex, & Malcolm X. (1992). The autobiography of Malcolm X. New York, NY: One World/Ballantine Books. (Original work published in 1965) Halfmann, Janet, & Duane Smith (Illus.). (2008). Seven miles to freedom: The Robert Smalls story. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Hamilton, Virginia. (1988). Anthony Burns: The defeat and triumph of a fugitive slave. New York, NY: Knopf. Hamilton, Virginia. (1968). The house of dies drear. New York, NY: Aladdin.

Page 300: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Hamilton, Virginia, & Leo and Diane Dillon (Illus.). (1993). Many thousand gone: African-Americans from slavery to freedom. New York, NY: Scholastic. Hansen, Joyce. (1988). Out from this place. New York, NY: Walker. Hansen, Joyce. (1986). Which way freedom? New York, NY: Walker. Harper, Hill. (2006). Letters to a young brother: Manifest your destiny. New York, NY: Gotham Books. Harris, Jacqueline. (1996). The Tuskegee Airmen: Black heroes of World War II. Parsippany, NJ: Dillon Press.

Haskins, Jim, Kathleen Benson, & Benny Andrews (Illus.). (2006). John Lewis in the lead: A story of the Civil Rights Movement. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Haskins, James. (1993). The march on Washington. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Helfer, Andrew, & Randy DuBurke (Illus.). (2006). Malcolm X: A graphic biography. New York, NY: Hill and Wang.

Page 301: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued

Hinman, Bonnie. (2000). Benjamin Banneker: American mathematician and astronomer. Philadelphia, PA: Chelsea House. Hoffman, Mary, & Karin Littlewood (Illus.). (2002). The colour of home. London: Frances Lincoln. Hopkinson, Deborah, & Raúl Colón (Illus.). (1999). A band of angels: A story inspired by the Jubilee Singers. New York, NY: Atheneum. Houston, Julian. (2005). New boy. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. Hru, Dakari, & Ken Wilson-Max (Illus.). (2002). Tickle, tickle. Brookfield, CT: Roaring Brook Press. Hubbard, Crystal, & Kevin Belford (Illus.). (2010). Game set match champion: Arthur Ashe. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Hubbard, Crystal, & Robert McGuire (Illus.). (2008). The last black king of the Kentucky derby. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books.

Page 302: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Hudson, Wade. (2004). Powerful words: More than 200 years of extraordinary writing by African Americans. New York, NY: Scholastic. Hudson, Wade, & Peter Ambush (Illus.). (2008). It’s church going time. New York, NY: Marimba Books. Hudson, Wade, & George Ford (Illus.). (1991). Jamal’s busy day. Orange, NJ: Just Us Books. Hughes, Langston, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (2009). The Negro speaks of rivers. New York, NY: Disney/ Jump at the Sun. Hughes, Langston, & Romare Bearden (Illus.). (1995). The block. New York, NY: Viking/Metropolitan Museum of Art. Hughes, Langston, & Brian Pinkney (Illus.). (1994). The dream keeper and other poems. New York, NY: Knopf. Igus, Toyomi, & Michele Wood (Illus.). (1998). i see the rhythm. San Francisco, CA: Children’s Book Press. Igus, Toyomi, & Higgins Bond (Illus.). (1992). When I was little. Orange, NJ: Just Us Books.

Page 303: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Issa, Kai Jackson, & Arthur L. Dawson. (2008). Howard Thurman’s great hope. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Jennings, Caleen Sinette. (2000). Free like Br’er rabbit. Woodstock, IL: Dramatic Publishing. Johnson, Angela. (2000). When mules flew on Magnolia Street. New York, NY: Knopf. Johnson, Angela. (1999). Maniac monkeys on Magnolia Street. New York, NY: Knopf. Johnson, Angela. (1997). Daddy calls me a man. New York, NY: Orchard. Johnson, Angela, & Loren Long (Illus.). (2007). Wind flyers. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Johnson, Angela, & Loren Long (Illus.). (2003). I dream of trains. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Johnson, Angela, & Rhonda Mitchell (Illus.). (1994). Joshua by the sea. New York, NY: Orchard Books. Johnson, Angela, & Rhonda Mitchell (Illus.). (1994). Joshua’s night whispers. New York, NY: Orchard Books.

Page 304: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Johnson, G. Francis, & Dimitrea Tokumbo (Illus.). Has anybody lost a glove? Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills Press. Johnson, James Weldon, & Bryan Collier (Illus.). (2007). Lift every voice and sing. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Jones, LeAlan, Lloyd Newman, David Isay, & John Anthony Brooks. (1997). Our America: Life and death on the south side of Chicago. New York, NY: Scribner. Jordan, Brian, Cornelius Van Wright & Ying-Hwa Hu (Illus.) . (2006). I told you I can play! East Orange, NJ: Just Us Books. Jordan, Roslyn, Deloris Jordan, & Kadir Nelson (Illus.). (2000). Salt in his shoes: Michael Jordan in pursuit of a dream. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Keeler, Patricia A., Júlio T. Leitão, & Patricia A. Keeler (Illus.). (2006). Drumbeat in our feet. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Kessler, Cristina, & Leonard Jenkins (Illus.). (2006). Best beekeeper of Lalibela. New York, NY: Holiday House.

Page 305: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued King, Casey, Linda Barrett Osborne, & Joe Brooks (Illus.). (1997). Oh, freedom! Kids talk about the Civil Rights Movement with the people who made it happen. New York, NY: Knopf.

Kotlowitz, Alex. (1991). There are no children here: The story of two boys growing up in the other America. New York, NY: Doubleday. Landowne, Youme, & Anthony Horton. (2008). Pitch black. El Paso, TX: Cinco Puntos. Lawrence, Jacob, & Jacob Lawrence (Illus.). (1993). The great migration: An American story. New York, NY: HarperCollins/Museum of Modern Art/The Phillips Collection.

Lauture, Denize, & Reynold Ruffins (Illus.). (1996). Running the road to ABC. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Lauture, Denize, & Jonathan Green (Illus.). (1992). Father and son. New York, NY: Philomel. Lee, Spike, Tonya Lewis, & Kadir Nelson (Illus.). (2005). Please, baby, please. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Lester, Julius. (2007). Days of tears: A novel in dialogue. New York, NY: Hyperion.

Lester, Julius, & Rod Brown (Illus.). (1998). From slave ship to freedom road. New York, NY: Dial.

Page 306: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Lester, Julius, & Jerry Pinkney (Illus.). (1987). The tales of Uncle Remus: The adventures of Brer Rabbit. New York, NY: Dial. Lessac, Frané. (1984). My little island. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Levine, Ellen. (2000). Freedom’s children: Young Civil Rights activists tell their own stories. New York, NY: Puffin. (Original work published in 1993) MacLeod, Elizabeth. (2007). George Washington Carver: An innovative life. Tonawanda, NY: Kids Can. MacLeod, Kevin. Groove grove (music). Incomptech. http://incompetech.com/m/c/royalty-free/ Magoon, Kekla. (2009). The rock and the river. New York, NY: Aladdin. Mathabane, Mark. (1989). Kaffir boy in America: An encounter with apartheid. New York, NY: Scribner’s. Mathis, Sharon Bell, & George Ford (Illus.). (2001). Ray Charles. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. (Original work published in 1973)

Page 307: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Marx, Trish, & Ellen B. Sensi (Photographs). (2007). Steel drumming at the Apollo: The road to super top dog. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Mayer, Robert. (2008). When the children marched: The Birmingham Civil Rights Movement. Berkeley Heights, NJ: Enslow. McDonough, Yona Zeldis, & Malcah Zeldis (Illus.). (2002). Peaceful protest: The life of Nelson Mandela. New York, NY: Walker. McKissack, P., & Leo and Diane Dillon (Illus.). (2011). Never forgotten. New York, NY: Schwartz & Wade Books. McKissack, Pat and Frederick McKissack. (2002). Miami sees it through. New York, NY: Golden Books. McKissack, Pat and Frederick McKissack. (2001). Miami makes the play. New York, NY: Golden Books. McKissack, Pat and Frederick McKissack. (2000). Miami gets it straight. New York, NY: Golden Books. McKissack, Patricia, Frederick McKissack, & James Ransome (Illus.). (1998). Let my people go: Bible stories told by a freeman of color to his daughter, Charlotte, in Charleston, South Carolina, 1806-1816. New York, NY: Atheneum.

Page 308: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued McKissack, Patricia & Frederick McKissack. (1996). Rebels against slavery: American slave revolts. New York, NY: Scholastic. McKissack, Patricia, & Fredrick McKissack, Jr. (1994). Black diamond: The story of the Negro baseball leagues. New York, NY: Scholastic. Medina, Tony, & Jesse Joshua Watson (Illus.). (2009). I and I. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Medina, Tony, & R. Gregory Christie (Illus.). (2002). Love to Langston. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Michelson, Richard, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.) (2005). Happy feet: The Savoy ballroom Lindy Hoppers and me. New York, NY: Gulliver/Harcourt. Middleton, John. (2002). Africa: An encyclopedia for students. New York, NY: Scribner’s. Miller, William, & Rodney S. Pate (Illus.). (2004). Joe Louis, my champion. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Miller, William, & Charlotte Riley-Web (Illus.). (2001). Rent party jazz. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books.

Page 309: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Miller, William, & R. Gregory Christie (Illus.). (1997). Richard Wright and the library card. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Milway, Katie Smith, & Eugenie Fernandes (Illus.). (2008). One hen: How one small loan made a big difference. Tonawanda, NY: Kids Can. Mitchell, Margaree King, & James Ransome (Illus.). (1993). Uncle Jed’s barber shop. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Mollel, Tololwa, & Linda Saport (Illus). (2000). Subira, Subira. New York, NY: Clarion. Mollel, Tolowa, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (1999). My rows and piles of coins. New York, NY: Clarion. Moody, Ann. (1968). Coming of age in Mississippi: An autobiography. New York, NY: Laurel. Moses, Sheila P. (2004). The legend of Buddy Bush. New York, NY: McElderry. Mosley, Walter. (2005). 47. Boston, MA: Little, Brown.

Page 310: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Mosley, Walter. (2000). Working on the chain gang: Shaking off the dead hand of history. New York, NY: Ballantine. Mwangi, Meja. (2005). The Mzungu boy. Toronto, Canada: Groundwood/House of Anansi. (Original work published in 1990) Myers, Walter Dean. (2010). Lockdown. New York, NY: HarperCollins/Amistad. Myers, Walter Dean. (2004). Here in Harlem: Poems in Many Voices. New York, NY: Holiday House. Myers, Walter Dean. (2003). The beast. New York, NY: Scholastic. Myers, Walter Dean. (2001). Bad boy: A memoir. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Myers, Walter Dean. (2001). The greatest: Muhammad Ali. New York, NY: Scholastic. Myers, Walter Dean. (1991). Now is your time! The African-American struggle for freedom. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Myers, Walter Dean. (1988). Fallen angels. New York, NY: Scholastic

Page 311: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Myers, Walter Dean, & Christopher Myers (Illus.). (2006). Jazz. New York, NY: Holiday. Myers, Walter Dean, & Christopher Myers (Illus.). (2005). Autobiography of my dead brother. New York, NY: HarperTempest/Amistad. Myers, Walter Dean, & Christopher Myers (Illus.). (1997). Harlem. New York, NY: Scholastic. Myers, Walter Dean, & Christopher Myers (Illus.). (1999). Monster. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Myers, Walter Dean, & Ann Grifalconi (Illus.). (2001). Patrol: An American soldier in Vietnam. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Myers, Walter Dean, & Leonard Jenkins (Illus.). (2000). Malcolm X: A fire burning brightly. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Nelson, Kadir. (2011). Heart and soul: The story of America and African Americans. New York, NY: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins. Nelson, Kadir. (2008). We are the ship: The story of the Negro league baseball. New York, NY: Hyperion/Jump at the Sun.

Page 312: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Nelson, Marilyn. (2002). Carver: A life in poems. Asheville, NC: Front Street. Nelson, Marilyn, & Phillipe Lardy (Illus.). (2005). A wreath for Emmett Till. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. Neri, Greg, & Randy DuBurke (Illus.). (2010). Yummy: The last days of a Southside shorty. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Neri, Greg, & Jesse Joshua Watson (Illus.). (2007). Chess rumble. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Nolen, Jerdine, & Kadir Nelson (Illus.). (2005). Hewitt Anderson’s great big life. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Olaleye, Isaac O., & Ann Grifalconi (Illus.). (2000). In the rainfield: Who is the greatest? New York, NY: Blue Sky. Onyefulu, Ifeoma. (2007). Ikenna goes to Nigeria. London, England: Frances Lincoln. Pace, Lorenzo. (2001). Jalani and the lock. New York, NY: PowerKids. Parker, Robert Andrew. (2008). Piano starts here: The young Art Tatum. New York, NY: Schwartz & Wade.

Page 313: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Parr, Ann, & Kathryn Breidenthal (Illus.). (2006). Gordon Parks: No excuses. Gretna, LA: Pelican. Partridge, Elizabeth. (2009). Marching for freedom: Walk together, children, and don’t you grow weary. New York, NY: Viking. Perdomo, Willie, & Bryan Collier (Illus.). (2002). Visiting Langston. New York, NY: Holt. Paye, Won-Ldy, & Margaret H. Lippert (Illus.). (2002). Head, body, legs: A story from Liberia. New York, NY: Holt. Pinkney, Andrea Davis, & J. Brian Pinkney (Illus.). (2010). Sit-in: How four friends stood up by sitting down. New York, NY: Little Brown. Pinkney, Andrea Davis, & Brian Pinkney (Illus.). (1998). Duke Ellington: The piano prince and his 0rchestra. New York, NY: Hyperion. Pinkney, Brian. (1994). Max found two sticks. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Pinkney, Jerry. (2000). Aesop’s fables. New York, NY: SeaStar. Pinkney, Sandra L., & Myles C. Pinkney (Illus.). (2000). Shades of black: A celebration of our children. New York, NY: Scholastic.

Page 314: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Rappaport, Doreen, & Bryan Collier (Illus.). (2001). Martin’s big words: The life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. New York, NY: Hyperion. Raschka, Chris. (1992). Charlie Parker played be bop. New York, NY: Scholastic. Raschka, Chris. (1993). Yo! Yes! New York, NY: Orchard. Raven, Margot Theis, & Chris Ellison (Illus.). (2005). Let them play. Chelsea, MI: Sleeping Bear Press. Ribeiro, Myra. (2001). The assassination of Medgar Evers. New York, NY: Rosen. Richardson, Charisse K. (2005). The real slam dunk. New York, NY: Puffin. Robinson, Sharon. (2001). Jackie’s nine. New York, NY: Scholastic. Shakur, Tupac. (1999). The rose that grew from concrete. New York, NY: Pocket Books. Shange, Ntozake, & Kadir Nelson (Illus.). (2004). Ellington was not a street. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.

Page 315: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Simmons, Alex. (1996). Ben Carson. Austin, TX: Steck-Vaughn. Smalls-Hector, Irene, & Michael Hays (Illus.). (1992). Jonathan and his mommy. Boston: Little, Brown. Smith, Charles. R., & Bryan Collier (Illus.). (2007). Twelve rounds to glory: The story of Muhammad Ali. Cambridge, MA: Candlewick Press Smith, Charles R., Jr. (2002). Perfect harmony: A musical journey with the Boys’ Choir of Harlem. New York, NY: Hyperion. Smith, Hope Anita, & Shane W. Evans (Illus.). (2003). The way a door closes. New York, NY: Henry Holt. Steptoe, Javaka. (1997). In Daddy's arms I am tall: African Americans celebrating fathers. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Steptoe, Javaka. (2003). The Jones family express. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Steptoe, John, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (1997). Creativity. New York, NY: Clarion. Steptoe, John. (1969). Stevie. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Stuve-Bodeen, Stephanie, & Aaron Boyd (Illus.). (2003). Babu’s song. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books.

Page 316: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Sullivan, Charles, Ed. (1991). Children of promise: African-American literature and art for young people. New York, NY: Abrams. Suskind, Ron. (1998). A hope in the unseen: An American odyssey from the inner city to the Ivy League. New York, NY: Broadway Books. Tadjo, Véronique (Ed.). (2004). Talking drums: A selection of poems from Africa south of the Sahara. New York, NY: Bloomsbury. Tarpley, Natasha, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (2003). Joe-Joe’s first flight. New York, NY: Knopf. Tarpley, Natasha, & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (2003). Bibbity bop barbershop. Boston, MA: Little Brown. Tate, Don, & R. Gregory Christie (Illus.). (2012). It jes’ happened: When Bill Traylor started to draw. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Taulbert, Clifton L., & E. B. Lewis (Illus.). (2001). Little Cliff’s first day of school. New York, NY: Dial. Taylor, Gaylia, & Frank Morrison (Illus.). (2006). George Crum and the Saratoga Chip. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books.

Page 317: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Taylor, Debbie A., & Frank Morrison (Illus.). (2004). Sweet music in Harlem. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Taylor, Mildred D. (1995). The well: David’s story. New York, NY: Scholastic. Taylor, Mildred. (1976). Roll of thunder, hear my cry. New York, NY: Dial. Temple, Frances. (1993). Grab hands and run. New York, NY: Orchard. Temple, Frances. (1990). A taste of salt: A story of modern Haiti. New York, NY: Orchard Thomas, Velma Maia. (2001). No man can hinder me: The journey of slavery to emancipation through song [Book and CD]. New York, NY: Crown. Tillage, Leon Walter, & Susan L. Roth (Illus.). (1997). Leon’s story. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Tingle, Tim, & Jeanne Rorex Bridges (Illus.). (2006). Crossing Bok Chito: A Choctaw tale of friendship and freedom. El Paso, TX: Cinco Puntos.

Page 318: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Troupe, Quincy, & Lisa Cohen (Illus.). (2005). Little Stevie Wonder. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin. Towle, Wendy, & Wil Clay (Illus.). (1993). The real McCoy: The life of an African-American inventor. New York, NY: Scholastic. Volponi, Paul. (2005). Black and white. New York, NY: Viking. Walker, Alice, & Catherine Deeter (Illus.). (1974/2002). Langston Hughes: American poet. New York, NY: HarperCollins. Walker, David. (2000). David Walker’s appeal to the coloured citizens of the world. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press. (Original work published in 1829) Washington, Booker T. (1986). Up from slavery. New York, NY: Penguin. (Original work published in 1901) Watts, Jeri Hanel, & Felicia Marshall (Illus.) (1997). Keepers. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Weatherford, Carole Boston, & Sean Qualls (Illus.). (2008). Before John was a jazz giant: A song of John Coltrane. New York, NY: Holt.

Weatherford, Carole Boston, & Jerome Lagarrigue (Illus.). (2005). Freedom on the menu: The Greensboro sit-ins. New York, NY: Dial.

Page 319: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued Weidhorn, Manfred. (1993). Jackie Robinson. New York, NY: Atheneum.

Williams, Mary, & R. Gregory Christie (Illus.). (2005). Brothers in hope: The story of the lost boys of Sudan. New York, NY: Lee & Low Books. Wilson, August. (1988). Joe Turner’s come and gone. New York, NY: Plume. Wilson, August. (1986). Fences. New York, NY: New American Library. Wilson, Jackie Napoleon. (1999). Hidden witness: African-American images from the dawn of photography to the civil war. New York, NY: St. Martin’s. Wisniewski, David. (1992). Sundiata: Lion king of Mali. New York, NY: Clarion. Woodson, Carter G. (1990). The mis-education of the Negro. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press. (Original work published in 1933) Woodson, Jacqueline. (2009). Peace, Locomotion. New York, NY: Putnam’s. Woodson, Jacqueline. (200). After Tupac and D Foster. New York, NY: Putnam’s. Woodson, Jacqueline. (2004). Behind you. New York, NY: Putnam’s.

Page 320: A Celebration of Identity

References, continued

Woodson, Jacqueline. (2003). Locomotion. New York, NY: Putnam’s. Woodson, Jacqueline. (2000). Miracle’s boys. New York, NY: Putnam’s. Woodson, Jacqueline. (1995). From the notebooks of the Melanin Sun. New York, NY: Putnam’s. Woodson, Jacqueline, & James E. Ransome (Illus.). (2002). Visiting day. New York, NY: Scholastic. Wright, Richard. (1998). Black boy. New York, NY: Perennial Classics. (Original work published in 1945) Wright, Richard. (1998). Native son. New York, NY: Perennial Classics. (Original work published in 1940) Wright, Richard. (1994). Rite of passage. New York, NY: HarperTrophy. Youme. (2004). Sélavi: A Haitian story of hope. El Paso, TX: Cinco Puntos.

Page 321: A Celebration of Identity

Thanks to Karin Mansberg, Sandra Hughes-Hassell and Nancy Heilbronner for artistic and technical help. Thanks, also, to those who made suggestions:

Damien Holst Sandra Hughes-Hassell Ernest Morrell (through his writings) Mary Ann Reilly Merle Rumble Alfred Tatum (through his writings)

Page 322: A Celebration of Identity

Resources

This powerpoint will be made available at:

http://bridgetolit.web.unc.edu/ --Please feel free to share widely.

Also, for multicultural and international resources, please see my current website:

http://www.wcsu.edu/sps/fbiojgangi.asp

Forthcoming:

Center for Literacy at Mount Saint Mary College, Newburgh, NY

Connecticut Reading Association Website

Page 323: A Celebration of Identity

Dedicated to Laconia Therrio—storyteller, chaplain, therapist, friend, and recipient of the 2012 Barbara Reed Award for distinguished and outstanding service to the Connecticut Storytelling Center