by Patricia Williams Dockery ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 9, 2025
Fleshes out an often-oversimplified era with a nuanced web of historical information.
Williams Dockery, who contributed Slavery and the African American Story (2023) to the Race to the Truth series, returns to remedy the widespread omission of “free and enslaved Africans and African Americans…from history books.”
Focusing primarily on the late 1700s through Reconstruction, she shows how people challenged slavery through overt and covert measures, leading to many judicial cases, such as Plessy v. Ferguson and Prigg v. Pennsylvania. Detailed explanations pepper each chapter, including anecdotes that show how states’ conflicting views of slavery resulted in laws that affected the lives of enslaved people and led to the Civil War and the broken promises of Reconstruction. Throughout, the author shares stories of brave people helping each other escape from slavery, including partnerships with Indigenous people and the Underground Railroad. She also highlights lesser-known examples of Black people’s contributions to American society and concludes with a discussion of the modern-day prison abolition movement. The chapters connect related concepts from different time periods, but because the book has few transitions between sections and the content skips around temporally, some readers may find the structure confusing. Some undefined terms and references indicate that this title may be best for readers who already possess some degree of background knowledge. Nevertheless, this volume is a valuable resource that helps push back against problematic erasure.
Fleshes out an often-oversimplified era with a nuanced web of historical information. (resources, bibliography, image credits) (Nonfiction. 10-14)Pub Date: Dec. 9, 2025
ISBN: 9780593811368
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Crown
Review Posted Online: today
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2025
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by Sarah-SoonLing Blackburn ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 26, 2024
Deftly written and informative; a call for vigilance and equality.
An examination of the history of Chinese American experiences.
Blackburn opens with a note to readers about growing up feeling invisible as a multicultural, biracial Chinese American. She notes the tremendous diversity of Chinese American history and writes that this book is a starting point for learning more. The evenly paced narrative starts with the earliest recorded arrival of the Chinese in America in 1834. A teenage girl, whose real name is unknown, arrived in New York Harbor with the Carnes brothers, merchants who imported Chinese goods and put her on display “like an animal in a circus.” The author then examines shifting laws, U.S. and global political and economic climates, and changing societal attitudes. The book introduces the highlighted people—including Yee Ah Tye, Wong Kim Ark, Mabel Ping-Hua Lee, and Vincent Chen—in relation to lawsuits or other transformative events; they also stand as examples for explaining concepts such as racial hierarchy and the model minority myth. Maps, photos, and documents are interspersed throughout. Chapters close with questions that encourage readers to think critically about systems of oppression, actively engage with the material, and draw connections to their own lives. Although the book covers a wide span of history, from the Gold Rush to the rise in anti-Asian hate during the Covid-19 pandemic, it thoroughly explains the various events. Blackburn doesn’t shy away from describing terrible setbacks, but she balances them with examples of solidarity and progress.
Deftly written and informative; a call for vigilance and equality. (resources, bibliography, image credits) (Nonfiction. 10-14)Pub Date: March 26, 2024
ISBN: 9780593567630
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Crown
Review Posted Online: Jan. 5, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2024
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More In The Series
by Ashley Fairbanks ; illustrated by Bridget George
by Abby Wambach ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 6, 2020
A powerful resource for young people itching for change.
Soccer star and activist Wambach adapts Wolfpack (2019), her New York Times bestseller for adults, for a middle-grade audience.
“YOU. ARE. THE. WOLVES.” That rallying cry, each word proudly occupying its own line on the page, neatly sums up the fierce determination Wambach demands of her audience. The original Wolfpack was an adaptation of the viral 2018 commencement speech she gave at Barnard College; in her own words, it was “a directive to unleash [the graduates’] individuality, unite the collective, and change the world.” This new adaption takes the themes of the original and recasts them in kid-friendly terms, the call to action feeling more relevant now than ever. With the exception of the introduction and closing remarks, each short chapter presents a new leadership philosophy, dishing out such timeless advice as “Be grateful and ambitious”; “Make failure your fuel”; “Champion each other”; and “Find your pack.” Chapters utilize “rules” as a framing device. The first page of each presents a generalized “old” and “new” rule pertaining to that chapter’s guiding principle, and each chapter closes with a “Call to the Wolfpack” that sums up those principles in more specific terms. Some parts of the book come across as somewhat quixotic or buzzword-heavy, but Wambach deftly mitigates much of the preachiness with a bluff, congenial tone and refreshing dashes of self-deprecating humor. Personal anecdotes help ground each of the philosophies in applicability, and myriad heavy issues are respectfully, yet simply broached.
A powerful resource for young people itching for change. (Nonfiction. 10-14)Pub Date: Oct. 6, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-250-76686-1
Page Count: 112
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
Review Posted Online: Aug. 31, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2020
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by Abby Wambach ; illustrated by Debby Rahmalia
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