More than a third of books banned last year featured fictional characters or real person of color, a new analysis from PEN America shows.
"My book is really to just let other people know that you're not the only one," Gentry student and author Rachel Leonard.
3hon MSN
"My book is really to just let other people know that you're not the only one," Gentry student and author Rachel Leonard.
When you purchase an independently reviewed book through our site, we earn an affiliate commission. THE TROUBLE OF COLOR: An American Family Memoir, by Martha S. Jones When Martha S. Jones was a ...
Historian Martha S. Jones found a remarkable and complicated story of identity, race and belonging as she researched her own ...
Four Color Fantasies and Literacy Volunteers Area are encouraging area residents to judge books by their covers.
In 2024, Harry Potter publisher Scholastic announced its intention to hire a new illustrator for The Goblet of Fire. It's ...
I thought a lot about that quote when I read Vanessa Priya Daniel’s book “Unrig the Game: What Women of Color Can Teach Everyone About Winning.” I don’t think I have read anything that resonated as ...
Supported by By Amanda Fortini “SUPPOSE I WERE to begin by saying that I had fallen in love with a color,” reads the first line of Maggie Nelson’s “Bluets,” her 2009 book-length lyric ...
The Texas Tribune on MSN1d
Texas Senate approves bill changing how schools select library booksSenate Bill 13 would create school library advisory councils largely made up of parents. It would give school boards the ...
The cover of 'Nance: A Girl of Color and Her Lawyer Abraham Lincoln,' a new book by Kevin Orlin Johnson. It details the case ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results