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โ€œThe 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 familyโ€™s going in six different directions.

Youโ€™re busy, between sports, extracurricular activities, work commitments, family gatherings, and community activity. If there was a meaningful way to get everybody together at once, youโ€™d be all over that so grab โ€œThe New Browniesโ€™ Bookโ€ by Dr. Karida L. Brown and Charly Palmerย and take a hint from Grandmaโ€™s time.

Ten years after the launching of the โ€œinfamous 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 โ€œserve 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.

โ€œโ€ฆ it was,โ€ say Brown and Palmer, โ€œa crown jewel of African American childrenโ€™s literature.โ€

This book, meant to โ€œevoke the spirit ofโ€ฆ [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, youโ€™ll find tales of ancestors and why itโ€™s important to know yours. Youโ€™ll find games for the whole family to play, including even the littlest kids. Youโ€™ll find photos and reproductions of Browniesโ€™ Bookย pages from the 1920s and new artwork from a variety of Black artists. Thereโ€™s 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 โ€œshe-roesโ€ and other giants in Black historyโ€ฆ

Absolutely, โ€œThe New Browniesโ€™ Bookโ€ lives up to its subtitle: it is, indeed, โ€œa love letter to Black families.โ€ Itโ€™s 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. Itโ€™s as if the pages have run out and thatโ€™s 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.

Donโ€™t 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, โ€œThe New Browniesโ€™ Bookโ€ is a great direction.

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