The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Books to read on the black experience

- — JENNIFER DAY, CHICAGO TRIBUNE

It feels as though a reckoning is underway, as citizens join together in protests to demand police reform after the death of George Floyd.

If this moment has left you wondering how we got here, we’ve put together some recommende­d reading lists. Here’s a roundup of relevant books, each with Chicago roots.

■ “Black Girl Magic: The BreakBeat Poets, Vol. 2,” edited by Mahogany L. Browne, Idrissa Simmonds and Jamila Woods

Heralded by Chicago Magazine as “the future of Chicago’s poetry scene,” this volume collects the work of more than 60 African American women, including Eve L. Ewing, Elizabeth Acevedo and Morgan Parker. It’s an affecting window into the daily struggle.

■ “Ghosts in the Schoolyard: Racism and School Closings on Chicago’s South Side,” by Eve L. Ewing

In our roundup of the best books of 2017, the Tribune wrote that “Electric Arches,” Ewing’s debut, establishe­d the Chicago writer and sociologis­t “as an artist who not only holds up a mirror to society, but makes herself a catalyst to change it.” Her work since then has borne out that promise. In “Ghosts in the Schoolyard,”

Ewing combines her personal experience in Chicago Public Schools with academic rigor to investigat­e the role of structural racism dating back to the Great Migration in the closing of schools in Bronzevill­e.

■ “Black Boy,” by Richard Wright

Wright was a product of the Great Migration. Born in Mississipp­i, he moved as an adult to Chicago in 1927, where he set his classic novel “Native Son.” Read his autobiogra­phy “Black Boy,” published in 1945, for a visceral portrait of his youth in the Jim Crow South, a childhood marked by poverty and hate. For decades and even into the 21st century, this book has appeared on lists of banned or challenged books. The truth, it seems, remains hard to witness.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States