NEWS

Fill your bookshelves with these great authors for Black History Month

Illustration by Janani Murugesan

by MELANIE CHAPMAN
Staff Writer

What better way to celebrate Black History Month than to support Black authors. The following list includes books of many different genres, some lighthearted and bubbly, others educational, and some where readers may feel too upset to turn to the next page. Please keep in mind to always look up trigger warnings before picking up any book, including the ones on this list. 

Penguin Young Readers Group, Penguin Random House, 2021

The Hill We Climb: An Inaugural Poem for the Country

Amanda Gorman
Poetry

On Jan. 20, 2021 Amanda Gorman delivered her poem that ended with a standing ovation from attendees at the presidential inauguration and a shocked nation. Amanda Gorman (22), became the youngest poet to read an original piece at President Joe Biden’s Inauguration. It’s no longer a video that can only be viewed on YouTube; Gorman’s poem, The Hill We Climb, is now a book.

G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books, Penguin Random House, 2021

The Taking of Jake Livingston

Ryan Douglass
Thriller, Horror, LGBT

This young adult horror follows the main character, Jake Livingston. Jake is one of the only black students at his school, other than his brother, who is considered more popular than Jake. Not only does Jake have to deal with the struggles of his identity, but he also sees dead people who are stuck in their own death loop. Most of these ghosts keep to themselves and leave Jake alone until he meets Sawyer, a dangerous teen who killed six other students at his local school. After killing himself he returns as a vengeful ghost who begins to haunt Jake.

Riverhead Books, Penguin Random House, 2020

The Vanishing Half

Brit Bennett
Historical Fiction

This award-winning novel is about two identical sisters who grew up together and lived in a small southern black community until they ran away at sixteen. The Vignes sisters were the same in every way until they chose two different paths in life. As they grew into adults, one sister raised her black daughter in the same southern town she ran from, and the other passed herself off as white while living with her husband who doesn’t know her true identity.

Quill Tree Books, HarperCollins, 2020

Clap When You Land

Elizabeth Acevedo
Young Adult, Contemporary, Poetry

A novel-in-verse (form of poetry) tells the story of two sisters, Camino, who lives in the Dominican Republic, and Yahaira, who lives in New York City. Camino and Yahaira share the same father but know nothing of the other’s existence. When the plane their father was on crashes, the unexpected tragedy brings them together to learn about each other and the father they shared.

Penguin Random House, 2020

Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot

Mikki Kendall
Non-Fiction, Feminism, Social Justice

Hood Feminism touches on the flaws of modern feminist movements and how they cater to a specific group of women and only their needs. Also, it touches on how certain topics in the feminist community commonly neglect the privilege of some women when it comes to race, poverty and politics. Mikki Kendall challenges readers to question, “How can we stand in solidarity as a movement when there is the distinct likelihood that some women are oppressing others?”

Little, Brown Book Group, HarperCollins, 2021

Act Your Age, Eve Brown

Talia Hibbert
Romance Comedy, Coming of Age

Act Your Age, Eve Brown is a comical, enemies to lovers tale that follows Eve Brown on her journey to “officially” becoming an adult after coming to an agreement with her parents to hold a steady job for a year. What she didn’t expect was to get stuck being a chef at a bed and breakfast with a boss who she despises, or so she thought.  

Katherine Tegen Books, HarperCollins, 2020

Grown

Tiffany D. Jackson
Young Adult, Mystery, Realistic Fiction

Grown follows Enchanted Jones, an aspiring musician, who auditions and catches the eye of famous R&B musician Korey Fields. Fields finds her to be promising and skilled, so he wants to help her build a successful career. But when Enchanted wakes up with blood on her hands, lack of memory of the night before, and Korey dead, she becomes the main suspect.

Comments

comments

Melanie Chapman

Recent Posts

WCC to see new withdraw, audit process for 2024-2025

Sasha Hatinger  Staff Writer  WCC has changed its withdrawal and audit process. Students can now…

1 week ago

WTMC student explores beyond earth, space with NASA-sponsored internship

Sasha Hatinger  Staff Writer Sruthilaya Rajavelu–Mohan, a pre-engineering WTMC student at WCC, is striving for…

2 weeks ago

Opinion: The Washtenaw Voice gears up for social media rebrand 

Sasha Hatinger  Staff Writer As much as I consider myself to be "off the grid"…

2 weeks ago

Review: ‘Gladiator II’ swings high, misses historical mark

Yana McGuire  Staff Writer  Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5 This review contains spoilers for…

2 weeks ago

Is my food safe from the bird flu?

Courtney Prielipp Washtenaw Voice 2024 saw an increase in the number of dairy cattle affected…

2 weeks ago