I found Amina in the collection of an American library in a city that’s now home to one of the largest communities of Somali-Americans, Lewiston, Maine. The Somali girls of Lewiston and of every city and town will find an…
Category: art
The Role of Art in Wartime: A Review of Symphony for the City of the Dead
In 1943, in the middle of the Second World War, an American diplomat nearly loses the microfilmed score of a symphony, and millions of lives hang in the balance. Why? This fascinating vignette begins M.T. Anderson’s stunning nonfiction work Symphony…
J. L. Power’s AMINA named 2016 USBBY Outstanding International Book
AMINA, (Through My Eyes series), published in Australia, a story set in Somalia, has been recognized by USBBY – United States Board on Books for Young People – as one of the top international books for middle-grade readers. In this…
Into The Dangerous World by Julie Chibbaro
What is art’s place in the world? How does it help people cope with death and pain? How is it a force for healing–and can it be a force for destruction as well? What do we mean by art–is it…
The Shark Curtain by Chris Scofield
I was enormously privileged to be the editor for Chris Scofield’s The Shark Curtain, which came out on the Akashic YA imprint Black Sheep earlier this year. The moment I read this book, I understood that Scofield was doing something…
The Many Faces of Josephine Baker
In this multi-layered portrait of one of the most famous African-American performers of the 20th century for Chicago Review Press’s Women of Action series, Peggy Caravantes presents us with Josephine Baker: a flamboyant, difficult woman whose dream of integration and…
What Will Your Beautiful Hands Do Today?
The first few times I opened up Kathryn Otoshi and Bret Baumgarten’s recent picture book for kids, Beautiful Hands, and read the opening line, “What will your beautiful hands do today?” I literally shivered with delight….and got goosepimples all over…
Introducing Kids to the Words of Freedom
One of the key moments in my childhood was reading a book about Harriet Tubman and realizing the horrible truth about slavery: that people were owned, that people were abused, that people couldn’t escape unless they were willing to risk…
Amira’s Darfur: The Red Pencil
Mental Illness, 50 Years Ago: A Review of Crazy
Laura Wahlberg has a secret that she hides from her friends and teachers—her mother’s mental illness. Once upon a time, her mother wanted to be an artist, but now her mother stares into space, often not recognizing her own family…