Spike Lee is one of the most prominent and influential media figures today. His films include the critically acclaimed
School Daze; Academy Award nominee
Do the Right Thing; Malcolm X; Clockers; and
25th Hour. Born in Atlanta, Spike attended Morehouse College and NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, where he earned his master of fine arts degree in film production. Spike and his wife are the authors of
Please, Baby, Please, their first picture book with Simon & Schuster. They live in New York City with their two children.
Tonya Lewis Lee is a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College and the University of Virginia School of Law. As a children's television producer she has worked with Disney, Nickelodeon, and Noggin/The N, where she was the executive producer of the award-winning documentary
I Sit Where I Want: The Legacy of Brown v. Board of Education and the critically acclaimed miniseries
Miracle's Boys. She is also the author of
Gotham Diaries, her first novel.
Kadir Nelson is an award-winning American artist whose works have been exhibited in major national and international publications, institutions, art galleries, and museums. Nelson's work has won the Coretta Scott King Award, the Robert F. Sibert Award, two Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Awards, and the 2005 Society of Illustrators Gold Medal. His beloved, award-winning, and bestselling picture books include
We Are the Ship: The Story of Negro League Baseball;
Thunder Rose, written by Jerdine Nolen;
Ellington Was Not a Street, written by Ntozake Shange;
Salt in His Shoes, written by Deloris Jordan and Roslyn M. Jordan; and many more. Kadir lives in Los Angeles.