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Let it Shine! Children's Books About the African American Experience



An annotated booklist compiled by the children's librarians at the San Francisco Public Library, June 2007. The books listed are a sampling of the titles available. Ask your Children’s Librarian for further suggestions, and tell us which are your favorites.

Picture Stories



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  • Full, Full, Full of Love by Trish Cooke. Illustrated by Paul Howard. Candlewick, 2003.
    (jPS COOK) Ages 2-6
    Jay Jay’s Grannie’s house is the place to be as his extended family gathers for a delicious, plentiful Sunday dinner! Also: So Much
  • Black, White, Just Right! by Marguerite W. Davol. Illustrated by Irene Trivas. A. Whitman, 1993.
    (jPS DAVO) Ages 3-7
    A mixed-race girl describes characteristics she has inherited from both her parents as well as their varied tastes, and how her family feels “just right.”
  • I Lost My Tooth in Africa by Penda Diakité. Illustrated by Bab Wagué Diakité. Scholastic, 2006.
    (jPS DIAK) Ages 4-8
    When your tooth falls out in Mali, the tooth fairy doesn’t give you money, she gives you chickens!
  • Hot Day on Abbott Avenue by Karen English. Illustrated by Javaka Steptoe. Clarion, 2004.
    (jPS ENGL) Ages 5-8
    Best friends have a “never-going to-be-friends-again day.” Also: The Baby on the Way
  • Welcome Precious by Nikki Grimes. Illustrated by Bryan Collier. Orchard, 2006.
    (jPS GRIM) Ages 1-3
    Loving parents share the gifts of our natural world with their baby.
  • Under the Quilt of Night by Deborah Hopkinson. Illustrated by James E. Ransome. Atheneum, 2001.
    (jPS HOPK) Ages 6-10
    A slave girl poetically describes the urgency of her escape to freedom on the Underground Railroad. Also: Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt and A Band of Angels
  • I Dream of Trains by Angela Johnson. Illustrated by Loren Long. Simon & Schuster, 2003.
    (jPS JOHN) Ages 5-8
    A young sharecropper longs to ride with legendary train engineer, Casey Jones, and leave his hard life behind. Also: A Sweet Smell of Roses and Daddy Calls Me Man
  • Shades of Black: A Celebration of Our Children
    by Sandra L. Pinkney. Photos by Myles C. Pinkney. Scholastic, 2000.
    (jPS PINK) Ages 3-7
    A sensitive photo study that celebrates the variety of skin tones, hair textures, and eye colors among African American children.
  • Superhero by Marc Tauss. Scholastic, 2005.
    (jPS TAUS) Ages 4-8
    Maleek saves his city parks with a little bit of science and a lot of imagination in this charming tale with black and white photos.
  • Show Way by Jacqueline Woodson. Illustrated by Hudson Talbott. Putnam, 2005.
    (jPS WOOD) Ages 5-10
    This lyrically-written autobiographical story relates the importance of quilting in Woodson’s family history. Also: The Other Side and Coming On Home Soon

Fiction


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  • Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis. Delacorte, 1999.
    (jF CURT) Ages 9-13
    Guided by his own “Rules and Things for Having a Funner Life,” 10-year-old Bud treks through Michigan in 1936, searching for the father he’s never known. Also: The Watsons Go to Birmingham-1963 and Mr. Chickee’s Funny Money
  • I Thought My Soul Would Rise and Fly; The Diary of Patsy, A Freed Girl, Mars Bluff, South Carolina, 1865 by Joyce Hanson. Scholastic, 1997.
    (jF HANS) Ages 9-12
    After gaining her freedom, a 12-year-old stays on the plantation to work for wages, but dreams of becoming a teacher. In the Dear America series. Also: One True Friend and Which Way Freedom?
  • Virgie Goes to School With Us Boys by Elizabeth Fitzgerald Howard. Illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Simon & Schuster, 2000.
    (jF HOWA) Ages 6-9
    In the Reconstruction South, a spirited girl finally convinces her parents to let her walk the seven miles to school with her brothers.
  • Heaven by Angela Johnson. Simon & Schuster, 1998.
    (jF JOHN) Ages 11+
    The truth about 14-year-old Marley’s family comes out in a mysterious letter. Also: Toning the Sweep
  • Standing Against the Wind by Traci L. Jones. Farrar, 2006.
    (jF JONE) Ages 11+
    With her mother in prison, her aunt put out by her presence, and taunted by the local gang, Patrice longs to win a scholarship to a prestigious African-American boarding school.
  • Day of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue by Julius Lester. Jump at the Sun/Hyperion, 2005.
    (jF LEST) Ages 11+
    A slave auction is seen through the eyes of its many participants.
  • Freedom School, Yes! by Amy Littlesugar. Illustrated by Floyd Cooper. Philomel, 2001.
    (jF LITT) Ages 6-9
    Young Jolie overcomes her fears and attends a summer Freedom School in Mississippi in 1964.
  • Journey to the Bottomless Pit by Elizabeth Mitchell. Viking, 2004.
    (jF MITC) Ages 9-12
    Exciting story about Stephen Bishop who as a 17-year-old slave in the late 1830s led tours by candlelight and mapped out every detail of Mammoth Cave in Kentucky.
  • Sienna's Scrapbook: Our African American Heritage Trip
    by Toni Trent Parker. Illustrated by Janell Genovese. Chronicle Books, 2005.
    (jF PARK) Ages 8-11
    Engaging journal of a girl’s family vacation visiting black historical sites along the east coast.
  • All of the Above by Shelley Pearsall. Illustrated by Javaka Steptoe. Little, Brown, 2006.
    (jF PEAR) Ages 9-13
    Four inner-city kids join their “dead-end” middle school math club in an attempt to win a place in the Guinness Book of World Records. Based on an actual event.
  • Jackson Jones and the Curse of the Outlaw Rose
    by Mary Quattlebaum. Delacorte, 2006.
    (jF QUAT) Ages 8-10
    The adventures of a boy whose mother has given him a plot in the community garden become thornier after he clips a rose from the local cemetery.
  • The Land by Mildred D. Taylor. Phyllis Fogelman Books, 2001.
    (jF TAYL) Ages 12+
    In this prequel to Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, Paul Logan works many jobs in pursuit of his dream to own land in late 1860s Georgia.

From the Oral Tradition: Folktales and More


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Poetry and Song


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  • Bronzeville Boys and Girls by Gwendolyn Brooks. Illustrated by Faith Ringgold. HarperCollins, 2007.
    (j811.54 BROO) Ages 7-10
    Children in a Chicago neighborhood are reintroduced in this newly illustrated collection of poems by a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet.
  • Let It Shine, Three Favorite Spirituals by Ashley Bryan. Atheneum, 2007.
    (j784.7 LET) Ages 3-8
    In his most recent collection of African American spirituals, Bryan uses brilliant cut-paper collages to interpret three well-known songs.
  • I, Too, Sing America by Catherine Clinton. Illustrated by Stephen Alcorn. Houghton Mifflin, 1998.
    (j811.008 I) Ages 9+
    Three centuries of African American history are laid out in 36 poems by 25 poets.
  • The Entrance Place of Wonders: Poems of the Harlem Renaissance selected by Daphne Muse. Illustrated by Charlotte Riley-Webb. Abrams, 2006.
    (j811.5408 ENTR) Ages 8-11
    Poems and brief biographies of the poets introduce this significant period of artistic achievement by African Americans.
  • Jazz by Walter Dean Myers. Illustrated by Christopher Myers. Holiday House, 2006.
    (j811.54 MYER) Ages 8+
    Here is a poetic father/son tribute to jazz, a companion to their Blues Journey.
  • He's Got the Whole World in His Hands by Kadir Nelson. Dial, 2005.
    (jPS NELS) Ages 3-8
    This well-known spiritual is beautifully illustrated with a San Francisco backdrop.
  • Nobody Gonna Turn Me ’Round: Stories and Songs of the Civil Rights Movement by Doreen Rappaport. Illustrated by Shane W. Evans. Candlewick, 2006.
    (j323.1196 RAPP) Ages 3-8
    First person accounts, songs, and poems complement this chronicle of black history in America from 1955-1965. Also: Free At Last!: Stories and Songs of Emancipation (j973.0496 RAPP) and No More!: Stories and Songs of Slave Resistance (j306.362 RAPP)
  • Langston Hughes by David Roessel and Arnold Rampersad, editors. Illustrated by Benny Andrews. Sterling, 2006.
    (j811.54 HUGH) Ages 9+
    Two Hughes scholars present 26 poems with brief notes as well as a biography of the noted poet.
  • Ellington Was Not a Street by Ntozake Shange. Illustrated by Kadir Nelson. Simon & Schuster, 2004.
    (j811.54 STAN) Ages 7-10
    As a young girl, the author met influential African Americans who came to her home, including Paul Robeson, W.E.B. DuBois and Dizzy Gillespie.

Non-Fiction


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  • Freedom Walkers: The Story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott
    by Russell Freedman. Holiday House, 2006.
    (j323.1196 FREE) Ages 9+
    Freedman clearly sets Rosa Park’s refusal to give up her seat to a white man in the context of the South and the times.
  • Romare Bearden: Collage of Memories by Jan Greenberg. Abrams, 2003.
    (j709.2 BEAR) Ages 7-10
    The life of this 20th century artist as reflected in his art. For younger readers: Me and Uncle Romie (jPS HART)
  • Powerful Words: More Than 200 Years of Extraordinary Writing by African Americans by Wade Hudson. Illustrated by Sean Qualls. Scholastic, 2004.
    (j081.0899 HUDS) Ages 10+
    Thurgood Marshall’s Supreme Court summary for Brown v Board of Education, Toni Morrison’s Nobel Prize acceptance speech, and Lauryn Hill’s hip-hop lyrics are included in the 34 selections.
  • Drumbeat in Our Feet by Patricia A. Keeler and Júlio T. Leitão. Illustrated by Patricia Keeler. Lee & Low, 2006.
    (j793.3196 KEEL) Ages 5-10
    Colorful introduction to African dance traditions through the work of the Harlem, New York-based dance troupe Batoto Yetu.
  • The Great Migration: An American Story by Jacob Lawrence. HarperCollins, 1993.
    (j759.13 LAWR) Ages 9+
    A premier African American painter dramatically records the history of his people in art.
  • Let's Talk About Race by Julius Lester. Illustrated by Karen Barbour. Amistad/HarperCollins, 2005.
    (j305.8009 LEST) Ages 5-10
    In simple terms that children can understand, Lester explains how we are all the same under our skin. Also: From Slave Ship to Freedom Road (j759.13 LEST)
  • Let It Shine: Stories of Black Women Freedom Fighters
    by Andrea Davis Pinkney. Illustrated by Stephen Alcorn. Harcourt, 2000.
    (j323.0923 PINK) Ages 9-13
    Mary McLeod Bethune and Shirley Chisholm are among those highlighted in 10 lively portraits that span African American history.
  • This Is the Dream by Diane Z. Shore and Jessica Alexander. Illustrated by James Ransome. Amistad/HarperCollins, 2006.
    (j323.1196 SHOR) Ages 6-10
    Both artwork and rhyming text make these examples of segregation understandable for younger children.

Biography


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