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A HISTORY OF ME by Adrea Theodore

A HISTORY OF ME

by Adrea Theodore ; illustrated by Erin K. Robinson

Pub Date: Jan. 4th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-8234-4257-7
Publisher: Neal Porter/Holiday House

An empowering picture book seeks to instill pride in the descendants of enslaved people.

A dark-skinned young girl is the only brown person in her class. When her teacher talks about slavery, she feels ashamed and scrutinized by her peers. After a lesson about civil rights, some kids on the school playground whisper behind her back, and one boy even makes a racist comment. Feeling like she has been reduced to her race (“Is that all you see when you look at me?"), the girl finds perspective and strength in the stories her mother has told her about their female ancestors. Recalling that she has privileges and opportunities her foremothers didn’t have reminds the girl to be grateful. The narrative skips forward in time as the girl grows up and has a daughter who also finds herself the only brown-skinned child in her class. Now a woman, the protagonist teaches her daughter how to break out of the boxes that people put her in and exhorts her to “sit up straight / and / fly high into the sky.” A double-page spread shows a proud Black girl holding her fists in the air, braids flying outward, with her face skyward and a dazzling sunburst behind her. This emotionally honest look at the challenges of processing historical injustice and racial trauma provides a much-needed mirror for Black students, but anyone who has ever felt trapped by other people’s definitions of who they are can relate to the story on some level. Robinson’s digital illustrations exude a gentle dignity.

An uplifting story that rightfully asserts the multidimensionality of Black identity.

(author's note, illustrator’s note) (Picture book. 4-8)