c.2018, 37 Ink / Atria Books
$26 ($35 Canada)
245 pages

Read this.

And that. Read whatโ€™s next to it, whatโ€™s above it, and the next page. Read it, because words soar. Read it because you can. As youโ€™ll see in โ€œBlack Ink,โ€ edited by Stephanie Stokes Oliver, it wasnโ€™t always so.

For 200 years of this countryโ€™s history, it was illegal for a person with black skin to read. Also illegal was writing in words that made sense; slaves who defied the law faced severe punishment, as did their teachers. Because of that, the story of โ€œfull literacy among African Americans has yet to be documented,โ€ says Oliver, and this book helps โ€œfill that void.โ€

When Frederick Douglass was a young man, for instance, he was owned by a โ€œkind and tender-hearted womanโ€ who taught him to read. Before he fully understood the process, however, she turned โ€œevil,โ€ but Douglass was undaunted. Seeing that which was started as a means to a better future, he used โ€œvarious stratagemsโ€ and found unaware โ€œpoor white childrenโ€ who helped him fill in the blanks.

Books helped Ta-Nehisi Coates to learn who he was, while Booker T. Washington saw a schoolroom as โ€œparadise.โ€ Zora Neale Hurston once claimed that she was โ€œsupposed to write about the Race Problemโ€ โ€“ problem was, that wasnโ€™t her interest.

As one of the best students in his eighth-grade class, Malcolm X dreamed of being a lawyer until a teacher put him down with words meant to โ€œbe realistic.โ€ Instead, it lit a fire in young Xโ€™s spirit and drove him to be successful.

Maya Angelou was prodded to read by a neighbor who gave Angelou a voice. Toni Morrison looks at writing, in part, as โ€œโ€ฆawe and reverence and mystery and magic.โ€ Stokely Carmichael was a bookworm (and was teased mercilessly for it). Jamaica Kincaid bemoans the loss of a library in her hometown (since reconstructed). As a girl, Terry McMillan never even considered that Black people could write books.

And on the subject of diversity in childrenโ€™s literature, Walter Dean Myers says, โ€œIn the middle of the night, I ask myself if anyone really cares.โ€

By virtue of reading this far here, you know youโ€™re a reader. But what kind of meaning does the written word hold? For the 27 African-American writers included in โ€œBlack Ink,โ€ words are everything.

Beginning with slavery still fresh, and wrapping up with a former presidentโ€™s thoughts, Stephanie Stokes Oliver pulls together African-American literary giants who seem to make literacy something that should be in bold neon letters. Indeed, the essays youโ€™ll find in here will make bookworms want to stand up and cheer. Reading is a superpower, in Solomon Northupโ€™s essay; and an old friend, with Roxane Gay. Words feel playful, with Colson Whitehead; and like precious gems with Maya Angelou.

This is one of those books that you can browse, flip through and consume at leisure, with essays of varied lengths and interests. If you are a reader or a writer, or both, โ€œBlack Inkโ€ will be a delight.

Read this.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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