Black Girl Power

by Leah Johnson (Author)

Black Girl Power
Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade

A vibrant, heartwarming collection of 15 middle grade stories and poems that celebrates the joy, strength, and experience of Black girlhood, including stories from Ibi Zoboi, Sharon M. Draper, and Leah Johnson, as well as cover art from Caldecott winner Vashti Harrison.

Black girl power is...

Bringing your favorite stuffed animal to your first real sleepover. . .
Escaping an eerie dollhouse that's got you trapped inside. . .
Making new friends one magical baked good at a time. . .
Finding the courage to dance to the beat of your own drum. . .

And more! From 15 legendary Black women authors comes a dazzling collection of stories and poems about the power we find in the everyday and the beauty of Black girlhood.

Contributors include: Amerie, Kalynn Bayron, Roseanne A. Brown, Elise Bryant, Dhonielle Clayton, Natasha Diaz, Sharon M. Draper, Sharon Flake, Leah Johnson, Kekla Magoon, Janae Marks, Tolá Okogwu, Karen Strong, Renée Watson, and Ibi Zoboi

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Hardcover
$18.99

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

This empowering collection of 15 stories about girlhood, written by authors of the Black diaspora--including Sharon Flake, Kekla Magoon, and Ibi Zoboi--and edited by Johnson (Ellie Engle Saves Herself), who also contributes, contains messages of hope, resilience, power, and friendship. Each story depicts Black girls contending with relatable conflicts: in "The New Rules" by Elise Bryant, a tween with anxiety must navigate the first day of school alone after her best friend ditches her. Speculative tales also abound: "First Bite" by Dhonielle Clayton follows a vampire who must find someone to be her first bite, and "Crème de la Crème" by Roseanne A. Brown features the humorous correspondence from a witch apologizing for a mishap at her magical pastry school. Stories sensitively handle subjects like grief, as when Sharon M. Draper showcases a tween dealing with guilt following her brother's death in "The Last Chocolate Cookie." Via unfiltered dialogue and striking characterization, authors center varied Black girls in stories that end on an upbeat note and urge readers who relate to the protagonists to always be their truest selves, even in the face of adversity. Ages 8-12. Agent: Patrice Caldwell, New Leaf Literary. (Nov.)

Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Starred Review

Gr 3-7--A mighty collection of 15 tales of Black girlhood from titans of kid lit. The entries run the genre gamut, deftly tackling common tween concerns such as bullying, identity, and first-day-of-school jitters through prisms of tongue-in-cheek fantasy, heartfelt realism, and even a touch of horror. An incumbent seventh-grade class president works hard to correct her big mistake in Sharon G. Flake's "Fake President," while an aspiring opera singer takes one step closer to her dream (despite her parents' skepticism), with the help of her sister in Tolá Okogwu's "An Aria for Abi." Prevalent throughout is the theme of Black girls tackling big life changes, and realizing they possess the inner strength to weather their respective storms. Also emphasized is the power of friendship, family, and community; most of the protagonists succeed thanks to unexpected allies or supportive loved ones. Highlights include Amerie's "The House Downstairs"--a delightfully unnerving horror story of two sisters battling a sinister dollhouse that wants them to stay, forever--and Reneé Watson's "Black Girl, Be," a lyrical beckoning for Black girls to delight in everything they are and all they can be, even (and especially) when the world does not. Readers will enjoy dipping into these bite-sized stories of complex characters finding their footing. VERDICT An anthology that beams with heart and hope, especially for young Black girls. Recommended for all middle grade collections.--Ashleigh Williams

Copyright 2024 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Kirkus

Starred Review

Electric: bequeaths confidence-building stories that sizzle with wisdom and a little bit of magic.

ALA/Booklist

Starred Review

 A celebration of Black girl power that is essential for all middle-grade collections. 

Leah Johnson
Leah Johnson is a writer, editor and eternal Midwesterner, currently moonlighting as a New Yorker. She is a graduate of Indiana University and Sarah Lawrence College, where she received her MFA in fiction writing, and currently teaches in their undergraduate writing program. When she's not writing, you can usually find her on Twitter, ranting about pop culture and politics. You Should See Me in a Crown is her first novel.
Classification
-
ISBN-13
9781368098960
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Freedom Fire
Publication date
November 12, 2024
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV011010 - Juvenile Fiction | People & Places | United States - African-American
JUV014000 - Juvenile Fiction | Girls & Women
JUV038000 - Juvenile Fiction | Short Stories
Library of Congress categories
African Americans
American poetry
Poetry
Children's stories, American
Short stories
Young adult poetry, American

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