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Black Girl You Are Atlas

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A Coretta Scott King Honor Book
Odyssey Honor Audiobook
A thoughtful celebration of Black girlhood by award-winning author and poet Renée Watson.

In this semi-autobiographical collection of poems, Renée Watson writes about her experience growing up as a young Black girl at the intersections of race, class, and gender.
Using a variety of poetic forms, from haiku to free verse, Watson shares recollections of her childhood in Portland, tender odes to the Black women in her life, and urgent calls for Black girls to step into their power.
Black Girl You Are Atlas encourages young readers to embrace their future with a strong sense of sisterhood and celebration. This collection offers guidance and is a gift for anyone who listens to it.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 20, 2023
      Watson (Maya’s Song) crafts a semi-autobiographical collection that speaks to the girl she was in her youth and the expansive experience of Black girlhood as it cycles toward womanhood via sharp and loving poetry. Accompanied by striking and vintage-feeling multimedia collage artwork by Holmes (Coretta), the poems evolve in step with the protagonist they portray as priorities shift, detailing new fears surrounding never having seen snow before (“snow for me was new/ because I was only three when we left Paterson/ and my tiny feet didn’t know snow”), meeting her father for the first time, learning about injustice, and practicing self-love (“Be a best friend to yourself. Be an enemy only to injustice, to hate.... Be your own hype crew”). Watson utilizes myriad poetic styles to address various topics, such as growing up Jamaican American in Portland, Ore. A series of haiku on sisterhood highlight the poet’s deep admiration of her ancestors, future descendants, and the Black women she grew up with, and poems “A Pantoum for Breonna Taylor” and “A Tanka for Michelle Obama” mourn and laud Black women in equal measure, making for a tender ode to universal yearnings for safety, love, and justice, as well as a celebration of Black girlhood. Ages 12–up.

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Languages

  • English

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