I could easily write about more children's books, but I thought it might be better to catch up on some of the grown-up books I have been reading. There are overlaps.
I had mentioned Marley Dias with her #1000BlackGirlBooks drive and the book she wrote. I came to that through A Centennial Celebration of The Brownies' Book.
https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2026/02/more-literature-centered-on-black.html
Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson
This is one of the books Dias mentions. In fact, I had read it in April.
It had a huge impact on Dias, but not the first time she read it. She thought maybe she had grown into it when she picked it up again.
I suspect it may be that you need to read it twice. There is a lot of atmosphere and mood with it; maybe you need to go through one time to get the feel of it and then you can absorb it.
But, Dias also did age between readings, which can affect readiness and perception.
The Enduring Legacy of Portland's Black Panthers: The Roots of Free Healthcare, Free Breakfast, and Neighborhood Control in Oregon by Joe Biel
The Black Panther Party: A Graphic Novel History by David F. Walker and Marcus Kwame Anderson
It had been about ten years since my last round of reading on the Black Panther party.
I had purchased Biel's book when it first came out, but not gotten around to reading it. Then I saw a movie about Kent Ford, who gives Portland tours, and is featured in the book. There was also a library summer reading challenge where one of the categories was a book set in Oregon. I figured it was time to read it. Enduring Legacy was okay, and led me directly to the graphic novel, which was excellent.
Biel's sub-title is really long, but free healthcare and breakfast are only going to get more important. The Black Panthers did some great things and we should think about what we can do through similar efforts.
Watch Me Fly: What I Learned on the Way to Becoming the Woman I Was Meant to Be by Myrlie Evers-Williams
That is an amazing life right there. Evers-Williams tells her story with a lot of insight, some of it about functioning in the business world, and probably considerably more realistically than Lean In.
Balthazar: A Black African King in Medieval and Renaissance Art edited by Kristen Collins and Bryan C. Keene
I don't remember what searches led to this one coming up in my results, but I had to read it because I still miss when medievalpoc was active.
Obviously the subject was Balthazar of the three kings. While the idea is interesting, the various essays strung together repeat. Maybe that is on the editors. I don't regret reading it, but there is unfulfilled potential.
There was a worse book yet.
Acting White: The Curious History of a Racial Slur by Ron Christie
Christie's problem is that he is a Black Republican who keeps getting offended when that gets criticized, connecting it to how he used to be mocked (and told he was "acting white") for doing well in school.
I don't doubt that there would have been some mocking; that can happen to nerds. It is also common to hear of academically inclined Black youth being supported in their communities and steered away from trouble. Maybe no one liked him. That would be hard, especially if it wasn't his fault.
He does not come off as particularly likable.
However, after writing this book in 2010 and then Blackwards: How Black Leadership Is Returning America to the Days of Separate but Equal in 2012 (maybe he meant Michael Steele, because he was critical of him around that time) I wonder if he has started to find any issues in white supremacy.