Mama's Library Summers
A Picture Book
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
Mama’s Library Summers is a moving picture book tribute to a strong Black mother, libraries, and the power of reading and of seeing oneself in books by the author of Chef Edna, Melvina Noel, and illustrator Daria Peoples.
Every summer, Mama takes her two daughters to the library to pick out books. Not just any books—books about Black people. In the 1960s, such stories were not taught in schools. If there were any books at all, they were often shelved in a separate part of the library. But that didn’t stop two sisters from making a beeline to that very spot and gathering up the library’s limit: ten books each.
Back at home, the three retreat to their favorite reading spots, and the older sister is soon running to freedom alongside Harriet Tubman; reading poetry with Paul Lawrence Dunbar; listening to Martin Luther King say, “I have a dream.” In these books, the older sister sees the struggles, the strength, the love, the hope, and the happiness of people who look like her and never gave up on their dreams. She sees herself.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Two sisters spend their summer taking in books featuring African American figures in Noel's transportive first-person telling, which, per an author's note, is based on memories from "a time when schools did not teach Black history." For the narrator's Mama, "summer vacation means reading books—lots of them!" In mixed-media illustrations that focus on the protagonists and the individuals they read about, Peoples captures the brown-skinned family's drive to the library, where the children head in to choose their reads ("Only books about Black people, Mama's directions"). Upon their return home to "disappear into our books," the narrator is shown engaging with luminaries including Harriet Tubman, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and Martin Luther King Jr. Later, "Mama holds book review contests... Winner gets an extra slice of Mama's homemade sweet potato pie." It's a celebratory love letter to libraries, literature, and the significance of representation. Creators' notes conclude. Ages 5–7.