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Build Your Stack: On Windows, Mirrors, and Telescopes

This Build Your Stack post was written by Â¥·ïÌìÌà member Stephanie Toliver. The Council Chronicle includes Toliver’s essay “On Mirrors, Windows, and Telescopes,” in which she extends the metaphor created by Rudine Sims Bishop to argue that teachers must provide youth “stories that exist at the intersection of reality, possibility, and the imaginary.”

Build Your Stack® is an Â¥·ïÌìÌà initiative focused exclusively on helping teachers build their book knowledge and their classroom libraries. Build Your Stack® provides a forum for contributors to share books from their classroom experience; inclusion in a blog post does not imply endorsement or promotion of specific books by Â¥·ïÌìÌÃ. 

 

In my work on Black girlhood and speculative storytelling, I realized that I needed an extended metaphor, something that focused more on imagination, futurity, and the fantastic. Over time, I’ve landed on the idea of a telescope as literary metaphor. I expand on this idea in my essay “On Mirrors, Windows, and Telescopes” (The Council Chronicle, Sept 2021.)

In that article I name authors such as Kacen Callender, Roseanne Brown, Zetta Elliott, Kwame Mbalia, L.L. McKinney, and Justin A. Reynolds as creating astronomical observatories so Black children will have a chance to magnify the celestial brightness that surrounds Black existence.

I also cite Darcie Little Badger, Tehlor Kay Mejia, Roshani Chokshi, Zoraida Córdova, Cherie Dimaline, Ellen Oh, Nafiza Azad, Rebecca Roanhorse, Malinda Lo, Cynthia Leitich Smith, and Isabel Ibañez as authors who have added to the observatory network, making sure all children have the ability to gaze at the stars and see themselves within an infinite realm of possibility.

See also  Teaching to Transgress, to Love, to Heal

In the list below, you’ll find specific recommendations of books to make available to our students, to help them look beyond what is and imagine what could be.

 

Books to Help Students Look Beyond What Is and Imagine What Could Be 

 

by B.B. Alston

by Liselle Sambury

by Darcie Little Badger

by Destiny Soria

(Book 1) / (Book 2) by Lori M. Lee

by Nnedi Okorafor

(Book 1) /  (Book 2) by Zoraida Cordova

(Book 1) / (Book 2) by Adam Silvera

by Donna Barba Higuera

by Katie Zhao

by Kwame Mbalia

by Tracy Deonn

by Aaron Paquette

(Book 1) / (Book 2) by Romina Garner

(Book 1) / (Book 2) by Somaiya Daoud

(Book 1) / (Book 2) by Jordan Ifueko

by Andrea Tang

by Sarena and Sasha Nanua

by Elizabeth Lim

by Nafiza Azad

by Ciannon Smart

 

 

 

Council Chronicle. 

Read a related blog post by Stephanie R. Toliver: Build Your Stack: Ensuring Black Girls Access to Science Fiction

 

Stephanie R. Toliver is an assistant professor of literacy and secondary humanities at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Informed by her love of science fiction and fantasy texts as well as her experience as a ninth- and tenth-grade English teacher, Toliver’s scholarship centers the freedom dreams of Black youth and honors the historical legacy that Black imaginations have had and will have on activism and social change. Her academic work has been published in several journals, including Journal of Literacy Research, Journal of Children’s Literature, Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, and English Journal. Her public scholarship has been featured on LitHub, Huffpost, and the Horn Book. Toliver is the 2021 recipient of the Â¥·ïÌìÌà Promising Researcher Award.

See also  Remembering Dr. Ernest Morrell: Former Â¥·ïÌìÌà President, Pioneering Scholar, Loving Educator

 

Â¥·ïÌìÌà and independent bookstores will receive a small commission from purchases made using the links above.

It is the policy of Â¥·ïÌìÌà in all publications, including the Literacy & Â¥·ïÌìÌà blog, to provide a forum for the open discussion of ideas concerning the content and the teaching of English and the language arts. Publicity accorded to any particular point of view does not imply endorsement by the Executive Committee, the Board of Directors, the staff, or the membership at large, except in announcements of policy, where such endorsement is clearly specified.