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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
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A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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Page 1: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

Picture Books

Biographies

Page 3: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 4: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

Eloise Greenfield and George Ford’s Paul Robeson

Page 7: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

Quincy Troupe and Lisa Cohen’s Little Stevie Wonder

Page 9: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 10: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 11: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 12: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 13: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Elizabeth MacLeod’s George Washington Carver: An Innovative Life

Page 14: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Tony Medina and Jesse Joshua Watson’s I and I

Page 15: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 16: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 17: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Chris Raschka’s Charlie Parker Played Be Bop

Page 18: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 19: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 20: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 21: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Lesa Cline-Ransome and James Ransome’s Satchel Paige

Page 22: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 23: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 24: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 25: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 27: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 28: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 29: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 30: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 31: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 32: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 33: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 34: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 35: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 36: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Sharon Bell Mathis and George Ford’s Ray Charles

Page 37: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 38: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 39: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

David Wisniewski’s Sundiata: Lion King of Mali

Page 40: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 41: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Marie Bradby and Chris Soenpiet’s More Than Anything Else

Page 42: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Picture Books

Contemporary Realistic Fiction

Page 43: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Jeri Hanel Watts and Felicia Marshall’s Keepers

Page 44: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

John Steptoe and E. B. Lewis’s Creativity

Page 45: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 46: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 47: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 48: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Melrose Cooper and Nneka Bennett’s Getting’ Through Thursday

Page 49: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Mary Hoffman and Karen Littlewood’s The Colour of Home

Page 50: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Frané Lessac’s My Little Island

Page 51: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 52: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 53: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 54: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Brian Pinkney’s Max Found Two Sticks

Page 55: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Chris Raschka’s Yo! Yes!

Page 56: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 57: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Javaka Steptoe’s The Jones Family Express

Page 58: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

John Steptoe’s Stevie

Page 59: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 60: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Shane Evans’s Olu’s Dream

Page 61: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Jacqueline Woodson and James Ransome’s Visiting Day

Page 62: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Youme’s Sélavi: A Haitian Story of Hope

Page 63: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Nikki Grimes and Mike Benny’s Oh, Brother!

Page 64: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Bryan Collier’s Uptown

Page 65: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 66: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 67: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 68: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Cristina Kessler and Leonard Jenkins’s Best Beekeeper of Lalibela

Page 69: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Elizabeth Alalou and Julie Klear Essakalli’s The Butter Man

Page 70: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 71: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 72: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 73: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Denize Lauture and Jonathan Green’s Father and Son

Page 74: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 75: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 76: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Picture Books

Historical Fiction

Page 77: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Julius Lester and Jerry Pinkney’s The Old African

Page 78: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Angela Johnson and Loren Long’s I Dream of Trains

Page 79: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Angela Johnson’s and Loren Long’s Wind Flyers

Page 80: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down

Page 81: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Patricia McKissack and Leo and Diane Dillon’s Never Forgotten

Page 82: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 83: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

William Miller and Charlotte Riley Webb’s Rent Party Jazz

Page 84: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 85: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 86: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Lorenzo Pace’s Jalani and the Lock

Page 87: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

A Choctaw Tale of Friendship and Freedom

Page 88: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 89: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 90: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 91: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Jacob Lawrence’s The Great Migration: An American Story

Page 92: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Glenda Armand and Colin Bootman’s Love Twelve Miles Long

Page 93: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 94: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 95: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Margot Theis Raven and Chris Ellison’s Let Them Play

Page 96: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Toyomi Igus and Higgins Bond’s When I Was Little

Page 97: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Graphic Novels

Page 98: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Youme Landowne and Anthony Horton’s Pitch Black

Page 99: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 100: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 101: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Poetry & Short Stories

Page 102: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 103: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 104: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 105: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Gwendolyn Brooks and Faith Ringgold’s Bronzeville Boys and Girls

Page 106: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

African Americans Celebrating Fathers

Page 107: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 108: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Greg Neri and Jesse Joshua Watson’s Chess Rumble

Page 109: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Poetry by African American Children

Page 110: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Charles Sullivan’s Children of Promise:

African-American Literature and Art for Young People

Page 111: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 112: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 113: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 114: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Lisa Wheeler and R. Gregory Christie’s Jazz Baby

Page 115: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Cynthia Cotton and Javaka Steptoe’s Rain Play

Page 116: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 117: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Harlem

Page 118: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Langston Hughes and Romare Bearden’s The Block

Page 119: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 120: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 121: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Jazz

Page 122: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Willie Perdomo and Bryan Collier’s Visiting Langston

Page 123: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Charles R. Smith’s Perfect Harmony:

A Musical Journey with the Boys’ Choir of Harlem

Page 124: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Véronique Tadjo’s Talking Drums:

A Selection of Poems from Africa South of the Sahara

Page 125: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 126: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 127: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 128: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Arnold Adoff’s I Am the Darker Brother:

An Anthology of Modern Poems by African Americans

Page 129: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 130: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Tupac Shakur’s The Rose That Grew from Concrete

Page 131: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Countee Cullen’s Caroling Dusk:

An Anthology of Verse by Black Poets of the Twenties

Page 132: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 133: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Informational Texts &

Visual Arts

Page 134: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 135: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Hill Harper’s Letters to a Young Brother:

Manifest Your Destiny

Page 136: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

The Road to Super Top Dog

Page 137: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Tonya Bolden’s Wake Up Our Souls:

A Celebration of Black American Artists

Page 138: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

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

African-Americans from Slavery to Freedom

Page 140: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 141: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 142: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Russell Freedman’s Freedom Walkers:

The Story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott

Page 143: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 144: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Dawn of Photography to the Civil War

Page 145: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Velma Maia Thomas’s No Man Can Hinder Me:

The Journey of Slavery to Emancipation Through Song

Page 146: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 147: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Michele Wood and Toyomi Igus’s i see rhythm

Page 148: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Elizabeth Partridge’s Marching for Freedom:

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

Page 149: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 151: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

War II

Page 152: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 153: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 155: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Kadir Nelson’s Heart and Soul:

The Story of America and African Americans

Page 156: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Ellen Levine’s Freedom’s Children:

Young Civil Rights Activists Tell Their Own Stories

Page 157: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

John Middleton’s Africa: An Encyclopedia for Students

Page 158: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Ifeoma Onyefulu’s Ikenna Goes to Nigeria

Page 159: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 160: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 161: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Robert Mayer’s When the Children Marched:

The Birmingham Civil Rights Movement

Page 162: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

James Haskins’s The March on Washington

Page 163: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

Chris Crowe’s Getting Away with Murder:

The True Story of the Emmett Till Case

Page 165: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 166: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 167: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Tonya Bolden’s Strong Men Keep Coming:

The Book of African American Men

Page 168: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Screenplay/

Drama

Page 169: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Caleen Sinette Jennings’s Free Like Br’er Rabbit

Page 170: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers’s Monster

Page 171: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Middle Grades Novels

Contemporary Realistic Fiction

Page 172: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Frances Temple’s Grab Hands and Run

Page 173: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 174: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Jacqueline Woodson’s Peace, Locomotion

Page 175: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 176: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 177: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 178: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Sharon Draper’s Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs:

The Buried Bones Mystery

Page 179: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Sharon Draper’s Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs:

The Buried Bones Mystery

Page 180: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Sharon Draper’s Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs:

Lost in the Tunnel of Time

Page 181: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Angela Johnson’s Maniac Monkey's on Magnolia Street

Page 182: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Angela Johnson’s Maniac Monkey's on Magnolia Street

Page 183: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Angela Johnson’s When Mules Flew on Magnolia Street

Page 184: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Patricia and Frederick McKissack’s Miami Gets It Straight

Page 185: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Patricia and Frederick McKissack’s Miami Makes the Play

Page 186: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Patricia and Frederick McKissack’s Miami Sees it Through

Page 187: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Charisse K. Richardson’s The Real Slam Dunk

Page 188: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Deborah Ellis’s Jakeman

Page 189: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Middle Grade and Young Adult Novels

Historical Fiction

Page 190: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Virginia Hamilton’s The House of Dies Drear

Page 191: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Kekla Magoon’s The Rock and the River

Page 192: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Joyce Hansen’s Which Way Freedom?

Page 193: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Joyce Hansen’s Out from This Place

Page 194: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 195: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Mildred Taylor’s Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

Page 196: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 197: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Christopher Paul Curtis’s Bud, Not Buddy

Page 198: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Walter Dean Myers’s Fallen Angels

Page 199: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Meja Mwangi’s The Mzungu Boy

Page 200: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Sheila P. Moses’s The Legend of Buddy Bush

Page 201: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Christopher Paul Curtis’s Elijah of Buxton

Page 202: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Candy Dawson Boyd’s Chevrolet Saturdays

Page 203: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Chapter Books Biographies and Autobiographies

Page 204: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Sharon Robinson’s Jackie’s Nine

Page 205: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 207: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 208: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 209: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Myra Ribeiro’s The Assassination of Medgar Evers

Page 210: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Jan Greenberg and Romare Bearden’s Paul Robeson

Page 211: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 212: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Mawi Asgedom’s Of Beetles and Angels:

A True Story of the American Dream

Page 213: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 214: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 215: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 216: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 217: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Manfred Weidhorn’s Jackie Robinson

Page 218: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Walter Dean Myers’s Bad Boy: A Memoir

Page 219: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

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

Page 220: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Bonnie Hinman’s Benjamin Banneker:

American Mathematician and Astronomer

Page 221: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Virginia Hamilton’s Anthony Burns:

The Defeat and Triumph of a Fugitive Slave

Page 222: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Alex Simmons’s Ben Carson

Page 223: A Celebration of Identity: Black Men and Boys in

Folklore

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

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Baba Wagué Diakité’s The Hatseller and the Monkeys:

A West African Folktale

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Jerry Pinkney’s Aesop’s Fables

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

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

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

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Tololwa Mollel and Linda Saport’s Subira, Subira

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

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Concept &

Board Books

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

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Randy DuBurke’s Little Mister

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Dakari Hru’s Tickle Tickle

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Angela Johnson and Rhonda Mitchell’s Joshua by the Sea

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

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

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Sandra and Myles Pinkney’s Shades of Black

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Novels in Verse

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

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Marilyn Nelson’s Carver: A Life in Poems

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

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Jacqueline Woodson’s Locomotion

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Young Adult Literature

Classic and Contemporary

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Jacqueline Woodson’s Miracle’s Boys

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Derrick Barne’s We Could Be Brothers

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B. A. Binns’s Pull

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Jacqueline Woodson’s From the Notebooks of the Melanin Sun

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Claude Brown’s Manchild in the Promised Land

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August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone

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Walter Dean Myers’s The Beast

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Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart

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Chinua Achebe’s Arrow of God

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James Baldwin’s Go Tell It on the Mountain

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James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time

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Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man

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August Wilson’s Fences

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Paul Volponi’s Black and White

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Walter Dean Myers’s Lockdown

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

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Julian Houston’s New Boy

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Nikki Grimes’s Bronx Masquerade

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Jacqueline Woodson’s Behind You

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Richard Wright’s Native Son

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Richard Wright’s Rite of Passage

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Walter Mosley’s 47

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Young Adult Literature

Classic and Contemporary Informational Texts, Autobiographies and

Biographies

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

of the World

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

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

Slave

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Booker T. Washington’s Up from Slavery

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Richard Wright’s Black Boy

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James Baldwin’s My Dungeon Shook:

Letter to My Nephew on the One Hundredth Anniversary of Emancipation

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Ben Carson’s Think Big

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Ben Carson’s The Big Picture:

Getting Perspective on What’s Really Important in Life

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

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Farrah Gray’s Reallionaire:

Nine Steps to Becoming Rich from the Inside Out

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Walter Dean Myers’s The Greatest: Muhammad Ali

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

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Miles Corwin’s And Still We Rise:

The Trials and Triumphs of Twelve Gifted Inner-City Students

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Alex Kotlowitz’s There Are No Children Here

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

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Walter Mosley’s Working on the Chain Gang:

Shaking Off the Dead Hand of History

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

Basic Rules of Survival for Young African American Males

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James Goodman’s Stories of Scottsboro

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

Life and Death on the South Side of Chicago

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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)

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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.

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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.

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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)

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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)

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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)

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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

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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