Robin Miles
Readers...
“Gayl Jones’s work represents a watershed in American literature. From a literary standpoint, her form is impeccable . . . and as a Black woman writer, her truth-telling, filled with beauty, tragedy, humor, and incisiveness, is unmatched.”
—Imani...
“A smart science fictional fable as inventive and involving as it is finally vital.”—Tordotcom
On the verge of adulthood, Rafi attends the Lyceum, a school...
Black Panther: The Battle for Wakanda
IMPOSTER SYNDROME!
There’s a crisis in WAKANDA. The sacred Mound is being attacked by an evil cult, and Wakandans are growing angry with their new king, T’Challa, aka the Super Hero BLACK PANTHER. So it’s bad timing when Black Panther is called away by the AVENGERS. There is strong evidence that Black Panther has stolen a highly classified weapon! With help from some familiar
...The Pulitzer Prize–winning, bestselling author of The Warmth of Other Suns examines the unspoken caste system that has shaped America and shows how our lives today are still defined...
8) Wild Seed
9) Three Poets of the Harlem Renaissance: Langston Hughes, Georgia Douglas Johnson, and Countee Cullen
The intellectual and cultural revival of African-American arts and politics in the 1920s and 1930s was centered in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City.
Here are poems from three major contributors to that rebirth: The Weary Blues by Langston Hughes, The Heart of a Woman and Other Poems by Georgia Douglas Johnson, and Copper Sun by Countee Cullen, delivered by three multiaward–winning narrators.