What would great-grandma do?
โThe New Browniesโ Bookโ by Dr. Karida L. Brown and Charly Palmer
c.2023,
Chronicle Books
$40.00
208 pages
ย
The kids are back in school now and already, your familyโs going in six different directions.
Youโre busy, between sports, extracurricular activities, work commitments, family gatherings, and community activity. If there was a meaningful way to get everybody together at once, youโd be all over that so grab โThe New Browniesโ Bookโ by Dr. Karida L. Brown and Charly Palmerย and take a hint from Grandmaโs time.
Ten years after the launching of the โinfamous The Crisisย magazine,โ W.E.B. Du Bois, Augustus Granville Dill and Jessie Redmon Fauset had another idea: they called it The Browniesโ Book, though it was really a magazine that sold for less than two dollars for six issues, or 15 cents for a single issue. It was 1920, Jim Crow laws were in effect, and their intention was that the publication would โserve as a much-needed medium for Black and brown children,โ by showing them what people of color had contributed to the world. It was also something white families could use and learn from, too.
โโฆ it was,โ say Brown and Palmer, โa crown jewel of African American childrenโs literature.โ
This book, meant to โevoke the spirit ofโฆ [the] original Browniesโ Book,โ pulls together dozens of original stories, poems, plays, essays, lessons, and artwork that mirrors what Du Bois had initially intended more than a century ago.
Here, youโll find tales of ancestors and why itโs important to know yours. Youโll find games for the whole family to play, including even the littlest kids. Youโll find photos and reproductions of Browniesโ Bookย pages from the 1920s and new artwork from a variety of Black artists. Thereโs humor in some of these stories, and one is a fun challenge for pre-teens. There are tales for older kids here, pages that help teach morality and empathy, stories to read aloud to a grade-schooler, stories that seem to end abruptly but that beg for meaningful discussion, and biographies of โshe-roesโ and other giants in Black historyโฆ
Absolutely, โThe New Browniesโ Bookโ lives up to its subtitle: it is, indeed, โa love letter to Black families.โ Itโs also pretty sweet on art and poetry, too.
Many of the essays and stories, though, may confound readers who are not prepared for their abrupt endings. Itโs as if the pages have run out and thatโs that โ but look again. Those ends-too-quickly tales invite a child to imagine what happened next or to think of a better storyline. They are ready-made to teach a child to be a storyteller, and for families to discuss.
Donโt think that this book is only for small children, though. This is the kind of reading that you can leave around for a teenager to find and browse, to provoke thoughts and spark ideas. There are inspirations inside here, as well as subtle lessons.
You can feel comfortable giving this to a family, new, old, or blended. It would be a great gift for your favorite babysitter or a grandparent, too. For your household, โThe New Browniesโ Bookโ is a great direction.