17 Books by Black Authors That Every Kid Should Read Right Now
There's nothing quite so transformative as finding a character in a book that speaks to you, especially when you're a kid still trying to figure out who you really are. Black History Month is the perfect time to celebrate the amazing African-American authors whose stories inspire and inform the next generation with their honest and heartfelt explorations of race, identity, and community.
From stories of slavery and the civil rights movement to tales of contemporary urban struggles, there's something on our list for every kid!
'Brown Girl Dreaming' by Jacqueline Woodson
The story of author Jacqueline Woodson's childhood in South Carolina and New York in the '60s and '70s told through a series of poems, this Newbery Honor Book movingly depicts the Civil Rights movement and its aftermath through the eyes of a young girl.
'One Crazy Summer' by Rita Williams-Garcia
Winner of the Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction and the Coretta Scott King Award, this Newbery Honor Book and National Book Award Finalist by New York Times bestselling author Rita Garcia-Williams is the story of three young sisters sent by their mother to a day camp run by the Black Panthers in the summer of 1968.
'Ninth Ward' by Jewell Parker Rhodes
The story of how a 12-year-old girl named Lanesha and her grandmother Mama Ya-Ya survive Hurricane Katrina, this emotional novel won the Coretta Scott King Honor Award and the Parents' Choice Foundation Gold Award.
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'Harriet's Daughter' by Marlene Nourbese Philip
An exploration of friendship, race, and identity issues, this winner of the Casa de las Américas Prize tells the tale of a 14-year-old girl named Margaret who wants to make an impact on the world like her idol, Harriet Tubman.
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'My Name Is Phillis Wheatley' by Afua Cooper
Based on a true story, Phillis Wheatley was born into a family of African storytellers before being captured by slave raiders and forced on a ship to America, where a kind white family teaches her to read and write and sets her on a long road to freedom.
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'Kendra' by Coe Booth
High schooler Kendra's mother gave birth to her at the age of 14 and left her in the care of her grandmother, but now that Kendra's starting to get in trouble herself, she wants nothing more than to live with her mom (who may or may not be ready for the responsibility).
'Fake ID' by Lamar Giles
Nick Pearson is an African-American teen in the Witness Protection Program who moves to a tiny Southern town and finds himself caught up in a murder mystery when his first friend is killed.
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'Hot Girl' by Dream Jordan
Kate's dealing with all the usual teenage-girl concerns -- worrying about her image, pining for her crush -- but she's also dealing with being a foster kid in the gritty neighborhood of Bed Stuy, Brooklyn.
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