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Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Librarians as Advocates

As a librarian I have the unique responsibility and pleasure of creating the universe. Arrogant? I don't think so. I create the universe because I curate the library. I pick the books that students read to understand the universe. From a very young age, we understand and are taught that if it is important it is in a book. So, if I don't read histories that include positive and accurate portrayals about people who look like me, talk like me, and live in places like mine then it is like I don't exist, or rather I can begin to believe that there is nothing positive about people like me. I could also reject books entirely, because I know that there are positive, interesting and fantastic things about me and people like me, but they aren't found in books.

Librarians MUST be advocates for all children. Not only for students that may be marginalized, but also for those students in the dominant culture, because they can grow up with a false sense of entitlement. Those kids grow up and become teachers themselves and tell their students things like "we don't need another black president". The take-away being that we've done that already, lets get back to the real business of white only, male only, Christian only politics. Read More

As we create the universe through the books we choose to place in the our libraries and on our classroom shelves we must be sure to:


  • Acquire titles that show diverse perspectives of historical events - On Columbus Day and prior to Thanksgiving be sure to display books from the perspective of Native Americans. Patriotism is not a religion. We make ideas available. Children should be allowed to look at history from every angle and make up their own minds.
  • Choose books that reflect the real lives of your students - Don't shy away from books that deal with racism, rape, incest, drug addiction and the like. We have kids in our schools who have been raped. We teach kids who are struggling with or have parents struggling with addiction. They need to know that they are not alone.
  • Make sure that there are diverse reflections of all kinds of students, even if you don't teach them - If you have an all-white population it is important that your kids have books by and about people of color and vice versa. If all kids consume is Teen Mom and Cops, white students will grow up to fear people of color and children of color will grow up to hate themselves (yes, I said it!)
  • Recognize LGBT students - You have a gay student. Again, you have a gay, lesbian or transgendered student. You may not know who he or she is, but they are there. Let them know that they exist in the world by choosing fiction and non-fiction books about their experiences. A review of the Stonewall Riots is essential in your non-fiction section. Take it a step further and choose titles on first amendment rights of students and then display it during Pride Week.
The stereotype of librarians as meek and mild mannered may be true in some cases, but that does not mean that we are weak. It does not mean that we are not powerful. Seize your power and create a world that is real, colorful and aware.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

YA with Black Female Protagonists

Check out this fantastic convo we had on twitter where I got some great recommendations for YA with Black Female Protagonists.


Friday, January 3, 2014

Writing Resolutions: I Resolve To....

Every year brings a new opportunity to reset, reassess and revitalize your life. I'm one of those people who love New Year's Resolutions. I like to look back and see what I can do better and then do it. Goal setting is fun and it's nice to cross things off your list. A good friend of mine and I used to host goal setting dates with each other and create a whole life binder out of the get-together. We'd cover everything in categories: physical, spiritual, mental, financial and emotional. I'm not as detailed as all of that anymore (this was in high school and early college), but I do love a good list.

Last years goals included:


  • Finish my novel
  • Speak at a professional conference
  • Be published professionally
  • Become a reviewer


Now this isn't the full list, because I've only listed things that I actually accomplished. I didn't decorate my sunroom or run a 5K as I'd hoped, but there is room for that this year. I'm hoping to really grow my writing portfolio, brand and reach this year so that means that I'll have to make some changes, so my goals are to:


  • Query my revised novel
  • Finish a novella
  • Secure an agent (I don't usually like goals that require approval from someone else, so this is more of a hope)
  • Post on the blog once a week
  • Journal every week
  • Write 1000 words each week (Now this seems small compared to a lot of writers, but I'm a binge writer, I'll knock out 20,000 in a week and then have a dry spell for a month sometimes. That is NOT happening this year. I'm increasing my output three-fold.)
  • Publish or secure a deal for publishing (There is also the  idea of self-publishing, but I'm still waffling on that one. We'll hash that out in another post.)


I've got some personal goals that involve getting my soft tail off the couch, but I'll keep those private for now. There is research that suggests that making your goals public increases your chance of meeting them so I'm putting mine out there and stepping out on faith. Do you have any you'd like to share?