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ALAN Picks (February 2024)

ALAN Picks: Celebrating and Exploring Black Experiences

This month’s ALAN Picks features books that explore the diversity of Black experiences in America. Ain’t Burned All the Bright by Jason Reynolds and artwork by Jason Griffin is a three-sentence book accompanied by powerful images that reflects on the isolation many of us felt in 2020. Friday I’m In Love by Camryn Garrett tells the story of a Black queer teen who wants to host her own coming out party in place of the sweet sixteen she never received. This is My America by Kim Johnson follows a young girl who is fighting to get her brother cleared of a crime he has been falsely accused of while confronting the racism rooted in her community. In Your Plantation Prom Is Not Okay by Kelly McWilliams, a teen fights back against the attempts of a new neighbor using social media to romanticize and glorify southern plantations despite their dark history.

Looking For Teen Reviewers: If you know students who are interested in writing book reviews of recently published young adult and middle grade books, let them know they can write for ALAN Picks too! 

ALAN Picks Book Selections: ALAN Picks accepts reviews of books published from spring 2020 to present-day, including soon-to-be-released books. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that still deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

Let Us Know How You Use ALAN Picks! If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions. 

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.

–  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor


A Short, But Powerful Book That Explores the Experience of 2020

Ain’t Burned All the Bright by Jason Reynolds and artwork by Jason Griffin

Book Details
Publisher: Atheneum/Caitlyn Dlouhy Books
Publish Date: Jan. 11, 2022
Page Count: 384
ISBN: 1534439463
Genre: Poetry
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Synopsis: Ain’t Burned All the Bright by Jason Reynolds is an easy-to-read book set in 2020. The protagonist is a young person who feels the fear and confusion in his environment surrounding the events of 2020 including COVID-19 and the Black Lives Matter movement surrounding George Floyd. The book is a poetic piece with a lot of artwork that allows readers to make their own connections to the events of 2020. 

Review:

I personally enjoyed this book as a short read. It captured a lot of the feelings I had during 2020 especially regarding the fear and confusion. 2020 was a very isolating time for everyone and Reynolds did an excellent job of capturing this. The use of cutout words and the artwork really helped to tie the central theme of 2020 together. There was a heavy reliance on the media during 2020 and the use of the author’s own media to tell his own story was reminiscent of that time period. Overall, this was a very captivating and easy to follow story. 

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Reviewed by: Michaela, Student at Purdue University West Lafayette, IN.


A Story of Black Queer Joy and Self-love

Friday I’m In Love by Camryn Garrett

Book Details
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers
Publish Date: January 10, 2023
Page Count: 288
ISBN: 9780593435106
Genre: Young Adult, Queer, Teen, Romance, Realistic Fiction
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Synopsis: Mahalia’s sixteenth birthday has already passed and she never got the movie-esque sweet sixteen of which she had always dreamed. After her best friend’s sweet sixteen and an encounter with a new student from Ireland named Siobhan, Mahalia decides she is going to make her own party happen: a coming out party (and hopefully she will get to be there with the pretty new girl)! With attempting to plan and pay for her own party, working through strong emotions, on top of Junior year stressors like the SATs, college and scholarship applications, and ignorance of those around her, Mahalia experiences the hardships of finances, life balance, relationships, identity, and being in high school all at once.

Review

Garrett’s writing feels like reading scenes straight out of a modern teen dramedy, from the screen to the pages! Mahalia’s story explores the hardships of struggling financially and needing to help family, while still being true to the desires of what people want to do, especially when things seem unfeasible. Garrett shows readers the microaggressions Black students may face in school, from ignorant classmates to white savior teachers, yet she never makes the story feel like one of misery, but rather one of Black joy, queer joy, and self-love! With a deeply realistic feeling of youthful thought processes and the real struggles that come from the identities we hold, Garrett has written a novel readers can connect to instantly and read through before they know it’s done.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Elements: The novel features many themes throughout that students can analyze and discuss in various ways throughout the novel.

  • Sexuality
  • Coming out
  • Homophobia
  • Race
  • Racism
  • White-savior complex
  • Socioeconomics
  • Religion
  • Independance
  • Self love/acceptance
  • Familial connections
  • Intersectionality

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Reviewed by: Ian Horn, Undergraduate English Education student at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado.


A Teen Fights for the Fate of Her Family

This is My America by Kim Johnson

Book Details
Publisher: Random House Children’s Books
Publish Date: July 28, 2020
Page Count: 416
ISBN:  9780593118795
Genre: YA, Mystery, Realistic Fiction
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Synopsis: This Is My America is centered on the Beaumont family, who is forever changed seven years prior when the father James Beaumont was wrongfully convicted and held on death row for a double homicide. Tracy Beaumont, a journalist for her school’s paper, dedicates her life to seeking justice for her father. While Tracy is fighting for the freedom of her father, her brother Jamal is accused of killing Angela Herron, head of the school paper and secret lover of Jamal. Tracy refuses to believe her brother could have had any involvement with the murder so she seeks to find the truth. In the midst of fighting for the fate of her family, she discovers the roots of white nationalism and racism in her community which has made her brother, Jamal, its latest target.

Review

This is My America is a compelling read that tackles the critical issues of our time. The author, Kim Johnson focuses on the protagonist, Tracy Beaumont who passionately fights to save the lives of her family. This novel is an emotional roller coaster that keeps you on the edge of your seat. Generational cycles of racism, the effects of systemic racism on justice, and incarceration are all prominent themes explored throughout the novel. From her first-person perspective, readers will go on a journey with Tracy and watch the effects of her father’s incarceration on her and her family.

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Reviewed by: Alazah Goodloe, Student, West Lafayette, IN.


Teen Fights American Distortion of the Past 

Your Plantation Prom Is Not Okay by Kelly McWilliams 

Book Details
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Publish Date: May 2, 2023
Page Count: 320
ISBN: 9780316449939
Genre: Young Adult Contemporary Fiction
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Synopsis: Set in the present-day southern United States, protagonist Harriet Douglas educates her characters and readers on the atrocity of romanticizing the Antebellum South. As a tour guide at Westwood, an enslaved museum on former plantation grounds, she is passionate in educating the guests on the inhumane and unjust realities that have been lost, distorted, or obscured. Sometimes purposefully through the narratives written by predominantly White historians. Harriet soon discovers that the neighboring Belle Grove plantation has been purchased by an actress with a teenage influencer daughter. The purpose for which is to rent out the ‘big house’ for high profile and luxurious celebratory events such as weddings and proms. It becomes Harriett’s mission to educate people on the violent, horrifying history of plantations, and advocating that they instead be turned into enslavement museums through her social media posts. Throughout her activism, Harriett also has to grapple with the grief of her mother’s death, her father’s respectability politics, and the betrayal of friends. 

Review

Your Plantation Prom Is Not Okay is a compelling novel that provides a tight, engrossing storyline on America’s distorted, messy, and ugly history of enslaved people and how relics of the past-not just in the South, are open wounds that must be addressed for healing to begin. This is a must-read for continued learning and discussion in order to further grow empathy and understanding, and to encourage a better, more cohesive civil society. Systemic racism is addressed through the negligent medical treatment her mother received while battling cancer. Microaggressions are also woven throughout, especially in the instance of Harriet’s treatment by a thoughtless White male teacher. She also has to navigate in a world where the beliefs and ideals of the older generation often clash with those of the younger generation. Her father’s respectability politics and pacifist behavior, especially for the sake of Harriet getting into a prestigious university, is a point of contention woven throughout. His way of dealing with pivotal situations grates against her activist approaches. From the onset of the text, the reader witnesses (and often feels) Harriet’s righteous energy and visceral emotions due to America’s past as well as what still needs to be addressed. She is an advocate whose drive and advocacy strengthens as the story unfolds, helping to bring awareness and a call for change.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis Topics:

  • Parent & Child relationships 
  • Dealing with Death and Loss 
  • Generational relationships 
  • Trust and Betrayal Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Mental Health 
  • Microaggressions 
  • The Power of Voice

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Reviewed by: Natalie Zook is an 8th grade English Language Arts teacher at Ladue Middle School in Ladue, Missouri. She is a certified reading specialist (K-12) who earned her M.S. Ed. in Reading from Illinois State University, and she is currently earning her M.Ed. in English Education from the University of Missouri-Columbia.

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