Ramadan Mubarak to our followers! May you have a blessed and generous month.
diversebooks.org
Content warning: Anti-Asian racism and violence, anti-Black racism and violence, xenophobia, specific examples of violence against Asian Americans, historical context of racism and anti-Asian senti…
“’Anti-racism’ is a noun but urgency requires us to treat it as a verb, I say. It means taking your awareness and turning it into action. Into doing something concrete. And then to keep doing it.”
We Need Diverse Books social media manager JoAnn Yao wrote about the Atlanta shooting, growing
up Asian in Georgia, & how both solidarity and joy can be found
while drawing a cartography of self. See below for our resources on how to take action, stand
against anti-Asian racism, and #StopAsianHate.
CW: Mention of Atlanta shooting. Full list of warnings at beginning of essay.
* * *

Asian Books & Authors:
Asian-Owned Bookstores:

Atlanta-based AAPI Organizations:

Fundraisers & Action Items:

(Source: diversebooks.org)
elle.com
This moment is a reminder to share our stories and create long-lasting change. Our lives depend on it.
“Most people, however, do not know, or have failed to grasp, the horrid and racist details of wars that helped bring many Asians to this country. Our experiences, including those of Southeast Asian refugees,
are rarely told or acknowledged. Instead, distant family members
recount their refugee stories to one another, sharing harrowing
narratives of escaping pirates at the sea or famine and starvation.
These same communities have been and are facing detentions and deportations.
Even in recent years, as mainstream society has begun to acknowledge
the need to address white supremacy and systemic racism, Asians and
Asian Americans are often left out of the conversation. As Dr. Mimi Kim,
who works on community accountability and transformative justice, once
said about the Korean War and its impacts: ‘The violence is also in the forgetting.’“
(Source: ELLE)
youtube.com
CREDITS:
In case you missed it live: watch the recording of the 2021 Walter Awards on YouTube!
Congratulations to:
✨ Ibi Zoboi
✨ Dr. Yusef Salaam
✨ Robin Ha
✨ Traci Chee / @tracichee
✨ Victoria Jamieson
✨ Omar Mohamed
✨ Daniel Nayeri
✨ Kacen Callender
Many thanks to our co-host The Library of Congress, emcee Laurie Halse Anderson, moderator Deb Taylor, & sponsor BookBub!
For more on the winners and honorees, see our virtual program.
(Source: diversebooks.org)
schoollibraryjournal.com
Debut novelists and former We Need Diverse Books mentees Diana Ma and Angeline Boulley discuss their writing challenges, their families’ reactions to their novels, and using the YA genre to discuss identity and culture.
“In 2019, Diana Ma and Angeline Boulley were part of the @weneeddiversebooks Mentorship Program, partnering with YA heavy hitters to craft their debut novels. Boulley’s Firekeeper’s Daughter is the story of a young Ojibwe woman who witnesses a murder and becomes an FBI informant on a new drug. Ma’s Heiress Apparently follows a Chinese American actress who travels to Beijing for a role and discovers long-concealed family secrets. Here, the authors discuss their writing challenges, their families’ reactions to their novels, and using the YA genre to underscore insights about identity and culture.“
The virtual Diversity in Children’s Literature Symposium and Walter Awards ceremony are in ONE WEEK! Join us in celebrating:
- PUNCHING THE AIR by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam (Walter Winner)
- WHEN STARS ARE SCATTERED by Victoria Jamieson & Omar Mohamed (Walter Winner)
- ALMOST AMERICAN GIRL by Robin Ha (Walter Honoree)
- WE ARE NOT FREE by Traci Chee (Walter Honoree)
- KING AND THE DRAGONFLIES by Kacen Callender (Walter Honoree)
- VERYTHING SAD & UNTRUE by Daniel Nayeri (Walter Honoree)
Coming up TOMORROW, Friday, March 12 at 1 pm ET — don’t miss it!
(Source: bit.ly)
ONE WEEK left to apply for our Black Creatives Revisions Workshop with Penguin Random House! Black writers, here’s your chance to complete revisions on your manuscript with the help of instructors Jewell Parker Rhodes, Jason Mott, Karen Strong, Nic Stone, & Nicole Dennis-Benn!
Info & application: http://bit.ly/BCFRevision
(Source: bit.ly)
The virtual Diversity in Children’s Literature Symposium and Walter Awards ceremony are in ONE WEEK! Join us in celebrating:
(Source: bit.ly)
nytimes.com
On TikTok and in virtual hangouts, a younger generation is sharing the origins and nuances of Black American Sign Language, a rich variation of ASL that scholars say has been overlooked for too long.
Variations and dialects of spoken English, including what linguists refer to as African-American English, have been the subject of intensive study for years. But research on Black ASL, which differs considerably from American Sign Language, is decades behind, obscuring a major part of the history of sign language.
About 11 million Americans consider themselves deaf or hard of hearing, according to the Census Bureau’s 2011 American Community Survey, and Black people make up nearly 8 percent of that population. Carolyn McCaskill, founding director of the Center for Black Deaf Studies at Gallaudet University, a private university in Washington for the deaf and hard of hearing, estimates that about 50 percent of deaf Black people use Black ASL.
Now, young Black signers are celebrating the language on social media,
exposing millions to the history of a dialect preserved by its users and
enriched by their lived experiences.
(Source: The New York Times)
Black history is not static, limited purely to the past—it’s made year-round. Keep reading books by Black authors and amplifying Black voices when it’s not Black History Month:
Picture Books/Early Reader
Middle Grade
Valerie L. Williams-Sanchez – “Celebrating the Anniversary of THE BROWNIES’ BOOK by W.E.B. DuBois”
Young Adult
Further Reading & Resources
The Black Creatives Fund
– An initiative with a mission of supporting new and existing
Black writers and illustrators. It will feature three initiatives in
2021, including a Revisions Workshop (which is currently accepting applications!), a mentorship program, and a marketing symposia in partnership with the Brown Bookshelf.
diversebooks.org
As Black History Month comes to a close, we
reiterate that Black history is not static, limited purely to the past —
it is made year-round. Here’s to the history-making Black creatives whom we’ve featured on the
WNDB blog over the past year, along with some additional reading &
resources.
(Source: diversebooks.org)
edweek.org
Whether white people are ready or not, policies have to change, writes the co-founder of the Abolitionist Teaching Network.
“Anti-racism work is all too often done as a performance—to be popular
and look ‘woke.’ It can be painstakingly ornamental. It needs instead to
embed community efforts, organizers, and the actual people who live
with America’s oppression. It needs to make structural changes that
dismantle centuries-old, racist institutions from the ground up in order
to rebuild with a commitment to community, safety (without police),
justice, diversity, and actual equity. For equity work to work, it must
be handed to the community. We have to actually trust the people we say
we want to empower to make structural changes, not just tinker at the
edges of injustice.“
Heartdrum, a new HarperCollins imprint led by Cynthia Leitich Smith (Muscogee Creek) has officially launched!
Leitich Smith says: “Heartdrum is a new Native-focused imprint offering a wide range of innovative, unexpected, and heartfelt stories by Native creators, informed and inspired by lived experience, with an emphasis on the present and future of Indian Country and on the strength of young Native heroes.”
Heartdrum titles THE SEA IN WINTER by Christine Day and ANCESTOR APPROVED: INTERTRIBAL STORIES FOR KIDS, edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith, are out now! More about the imprint here.
(Source: cynthialeitichsmith.com)
Saundra Mitchell is holding open submissions for the third and final OUT anthology, OUT THERE: Into the Queer New Yonder! Coming May 2022 from Inkyard Press.
OUT THERE will feature stories written by queer YA authors, about queer teen protagonists, and there are two slots to be filled through open submissions by any queer YA author.
If selected, your story will join stories by Leah Johnson, Kalynn Bayron, Alex London, Nita Tyndall, Abdi Nazemian, Alechia Dow, Kayla Ancrum, Naomi Kanakia, Adam Sass, Mason Deaver, Claire Kann, Zabé Ellor, Emma K. Ohland, Jim McCarthy and Z Brewer in this fantastic, futuristic collection!
Authors may be published or unpublished, agented or unagented.
Submissions will be considered by the review panel, featuring Saundra Mitchell, and and award-winning authors Tehlor Kay Mejia and Julian Winters. Mejia appeared in ALL OUT, and Winters appeared in OUT NOW. The two authors whose stories are selected will be paid $900 US, and a prorated share of any royalties.
Only a couple of weeks left to submit stories for OUT THERE! Writers have until March 1, 2021 to submit.
(Source: saundramitchell.com)