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Showing posts with label African American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African American. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Having Our Say


This memoir tells the story of two sisters who both lived to be over 100 years old. There is so much history to unpack in this book. Sadie and Bessie were the children of slaves and grew to become professionals living in Harlem, New York. One became a teacher and one became a dentist. This is a perfect book to help students learn about and explore their own history within their own families.

Pre/Post Activities for Having Our Say

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Americanah


Adichie, C. N. (2013). Americanah. New York: Knopf.

Hardcover | $26.95 USD | ISBN-13: 978-0307271082 | 496 pages | Adult Fiction 

Americanah

Adichie has written a chilling masterpiece.  This novel can’t be about just one topic because so much is woven together. Here are some of the questions addressed: What does it mean to be African and live in America?  How does moving from Nigeria to America affect and change someone?  What is the impact this will have on relationships? On love?  What will be realized about communities? White privilege? What will be learned about ethnocentrism and about our own identities? These are all questions that Adichie discusses through her character Ifemelu, a young Nigerian woman who moves to America in pursuit of a higher education. 

Ifemelu has moved to America to study and to become a wrier. She has her ideas about what America should be like based on TV shows like the Cosby’s, but upon her arrival she realizes its not what she thought. She is there to attend school and starts off fresh and new and is learning a lot about her new homeland called America. Truth is, the experience of coming to America, taught her a lot and taught her about things she did not know existed, including the four letter word: race. The concept of race didn’t exist in Nigeria, but it exists on every street corner, store, and train station in every city in America. She learns what it means and what it feels like to be “black” in America. Ifemelu begins to write a blog about race in America.  She does not have it easy in America – she hits some real lows and struggles to find a job, but through a lot of flashbacks we learn that she does gain an education, a fellowship at Princeton and finds a new love in an African American professor.  Her life was kind of easy in comparison back in Nigeria, or maybe it was just simpler. Ifemula ends the blog and returns to Nigeria after thirteen years of living in cities all around the U.S. But she isn’t returning to what she originally planned. Things have changed.

To make the story more interesting, there are parallel stories intertwined. Her teenage love, Obinze, wanted to also come to America to finish school, but because it is post 9/11 he is not permitted to enter the U.S. Instead he goes to London and faces his own challenges with finding a job. He tries to fake a marriage but is deported. He struggles just as much as Ifemelu, but upon his return to Nigeria he marries again, but the problem is it wasn’t for love and he is not happy. Adichie’s characters are both unhappy and unsatisfied with the position that they found themselves in, although oceans and continents apart. Their love went in opposite directions while their hearts remained in Nigeria, though they didn’t know it. It took a journey of self-realization to appreciate the life they had. However, the experiences taught them and stretched them.

This realistic love story will provide readers with plenty of insight for those who want to have their eyes opened to the issues of race, migration and struggles in America. This book is highly recommended for all readers. Though race has an important role in this book, not only Africans or African Americans need to read this. This is one book that all readers from all races should read because the honesty of the characters and their experiences will teach us all. It belongs in every library’s multicultural collection. This work is highly recommended for all public libraries.

Monday, August 26, 2013

A Deeper Love Inside: The Porsche Santiago Story


Souljah, S. (2013). A Deeper Love Inside: The Porsche Santiaga Story. New York: Atria/Emily Bestler Books.

Hardcover | $18.68 USD | ISBN-13: 9781439165317 | 432 pages | YA Fiction



From the nicest house in all of Long Island to failed foster homes to a prison cell on C-block in juvy to a hideaway house on a Native American reservation in Seneca, New York, Porsche tells the traumatic story of her childhood.

Porsche’s childhood was a living nightmare; she wondered where her family was. Porsche was 8 at the time when the feds raided their home and separated her family. Porsche didn’t know much about the family business, but she knew what she knew. She knew her father was a good man and that people loved him. She knew her mother completed her father and together they were unstoppable. She knew her older sister Winter was a queen and beautiful and of course, she looked up to her. But even Winter abandoned her. These were things she knew but she tried not to think about because she was trying to survive. While in juvy, we learn a lot about Porsche’s past and we experience alongside her some horrific stories about the prison she was forced to call home. She was property of the state. No one visited her. Porsche stayed mostly to herself but finds one friend that she trusts and is near her all the time: Siri. Together, they join forces with Riot, an older girl and one of the Diamond Needles. Riot is the #1 mastermind of the gang; she plans an escape. This is just the beginning. Riot takes care of her like an older sister should and NanaAnna, the woman who hides them on the reservation, takes care of both Riot and Porsche. But Porsche has to find her family. Riot helps Porsche find her mom in New York at a park, with a missing tooth, and smelling like piss. Porsche’s mom is strung out – drugs are mind altering and she does not recognize her own daughter. Porsche works hard to hustle and make a better life for her mom. She does not know where her father or sisters are, but all of that will be discovered. Porsche (or Ivory as she calls herself to hide her identity) will discover love. She will discover this deep love and spend most of the story running from it (or him!) Sometimes the truth hurts us more than we are willing to say. The truth that Porsche will discover about her family, about her past will hurt her and it will always impact and affect her in her future, no matter where she goes or who she is with. She loses a lot – you could say she lost her childhood. She dealt with things no child should deal with – it caused her to see and to hear things – even to imagine friends. She would never get over some of these horrific events, no matter the coping mechanisms. Many young adult readers will feel sadness as well as compassion for young Porsche; they will respect her too.

Sister Souljah published this sequel to The Coldest Winter Ever, which is Winter’s account of what happened to the Santiago family, but it can be considered in my opinion a stand-alone novel. I would highly recommend this book for high school students and up. Because of its content I feel younger readers (including middle school readers) should wait to high school to read this novel. Still, this is a must read for all mature young adult readers. Highly recommended for high school libraries and public libraries. Sister Souljah’s reach as an activist, author and problem solver in her community and world is well known (“Sister Souljah”, 2013). She brings to life characters whose lives are transformed before your eyes. Whether their lives change for better or worse, I can guarantee you will want to read more from Sister Souljah.

Friday, August 16, 2013

We Are America


Myers, W. D. (2011). We Are America: A Tribute from the Heart. New York: HarperCollins.

Hardcover | $14.52 USD | ISBN-13: 978-0060523084 | 40 pgs | Ages 6 & up




What does it mean to be an American? We are so diverse and yet connected in so many ways. Walter Dean Myers along with his son Christopher Myers created this beautifully written and illustrated book celebrating what it means to be American and to live in America. We Are America shares the many struggles, the ideals and the hopes that we collectively and individually hold in our hearts.

America has had a difficult past – some may wonder how we are so blessed to live in a beautiful land when so many horrendous things have occurred throughout American history.  Myers pays tribute to these difficult events in our past in a truthful and heartfelt way.  The people who came mistreated those who were already here and those who came after, especially those who were forced here had the most difficult journey throughout our history. Yet America still provides so many with the freedoms, dreams and hopes to reach great heights while allowing for openness in discussion and debates with things we do not like or work to change. 


I believe this book provides only a taste of Walter Dean Myers’ greatness. Myers is a famous African American New York Times best selling author of Monster and he has received every single major award in the field of children’s literature. He has written two Newbery Honor Books and received five Coretta Scott King Awards. He is the first winner of the Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement. Walter Dean Myers is an author that everyone should encounter in their readings. He is considered to be one of the most distinguished authors for young people. Myers lives in Jersey City with his family.Illustrator Christopher Myers worked with his father to create this book. He has illustrated Caldecott Honor books and Coretta Scott King Honor Books as well, some also written by Walter Dean Myers as well. His work has been shown in many art museums.

Something that young people will enjoy is the Who Is America website which Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers created in reference to this book. The site is: http://www.who-is-america.com/  All can share their voice and their own story about who they believe represents America. Anyone is free to create a video about what it means to be an American and post it to Youtube. One story is featured every week.  Visit the Youtube link to watch Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers explain their inspiration for creating We Are America: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDQXjG0hjLQ