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Tag Archives: jason reynolds

Books to Read During Black History Month

9 February 201816 August 2023

It is Black History Month.  This past year, I had the pleasure of being introduced to some great authors and stories that really hit home and I enjoyed immensely.  If you are looking for something to read this month, I recommend these books.

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Jesmyn Ward

I was introduced to Jesmyn Ward’s work a few years ago when “Salvage the Bones” came out.  It was so beautifully written, it was such a breath of fresh air to know there are still writers out there that value well written words and character development.  She masterfully tells stories of people from the South, where she immerses you in the unique dialects of the characters, while describing conditions of extreme poverty in America.  Her stories are haunting, which means they will stick with you.  You will never forget her protagonists, because she makes you feel deeply for them.

Ward is essentially a modern day Great American Writer, telling the stories of the forgotten people of America by giving them life on the pages of her books.  She has won many awards for her works.

Three reasons why it is important to read Ward’s works now: 1) to understand the human conditions of those left forgotten in America, the ones who have no voice, 2) you are witnessing brilliance in real time of a living Great American Author, and 3) her works will one day be the classics people will be reading centuries from now.

Jason Reynolds

One of my favorite YA authors right now is Jason Reynolds.  When I saw him at the Book Expo, he looked like this super cool dude everyone wants to be friends with.  When he spoke about his childhood sitting under the pecan tree, we got a glimpse into the man behind the stories and why they exist.

You see, Reynolds is writing the stories he wished he had when he was growing up.  When I read “Miles Morales,” I was blown away by the life lessons he was teaching.  While Miles is a story about a superhero, Reynolds teaches that you can be a hero in your own neighborhood.  You don’t need super powers to be a hero.  [Read the PW review]

Long Way Down moved me with Reynolds’s elegance and power of words.  So few words were used, but so many things were being said.  It was so well done.

Even if you do not read YA, consider picking up Reynolds’s books.  He will blow your mind.

Moonless, Starless Sky

While this book is about extremism in Africa, it is written by a staff writer from the New Yorker.  The reporting and writing of this story was done so well, I closed the book when I finished and said, “That’s the way journalism should be.”

Alexis Okeowo is a first generation American that covered the stories of people in Africa fighting extremism.  The irony though is that these stories are very reminiscent of what we are seeing in America.  In a way, it will inspire you to fight against the extremism that is rising in America today.

I want you to pick up this book because I want to make sure you read Alexis’s work.  In this day and age of mediocrity and fake media, it is a breath of fresh air to encounter a journalist that steps up their game and rises above it all.  This is journalism at its best.

Stay With Me

Stay With Me is considered to be one of the most important books you need to read this year.  While there’s nothing quite American about this book, there is something to be said about a 30 year old that can write such a powerful novel like this.

Ayobami Adebayo is Nigerian.  In her debut novel, she brings us into the world of Nigeria and the struggles women and couples go through.  In this story, we follow a couple with fertility issues.  When Yejide fails to produce a child, her in-laws and the village forces her husband to take a second wife.

The way outsiders can come in and dictate to a couple how their marriage should be shows not only the error in judging, but also the error of not acknowledging that what happens between a married couple is sacred.  For Yejide and Akin, they hold a much deeper secret that no one outside of their marriage should know.  Letting someone know their secret can destroy their marriage.

I recommend this book because it helps us look outside of ourselves and the American life to see a different world when it comes to marriage and motherhood.  A powerful, remarkable book from a fresh, new voice.

For the Kids

Every MLK, Jr. Day, the sales for Brad Meltzer’s book “I Am Martin Luther King, Jr.” skyrockets.  His series for children, “Ordinary People Change the World,” is such an amazing take on the lives of the most influential people in human history.

I started off with “I Am Rosa Parks” and it shook my heart and soul.  To see her story from the aspect of a child, it made me see just how real these icons are.  They are just like you.  They are just like me.  They are ordinary people that decided one day to make a stand (or stay seated in this case), and it changed the course of history.

There is nothing remarkable about any of these people.  There was nothing that made them stand out from anyone else.  Then one day, when they were faced with adversity, they made a decision, and made the world into a better place because of that decision.

These books are designed for children to understand that people like Rosa Parks, Harriet Tubman, and Martin Luther King, Jr. were just like them.  They were kids once.  They faced hardships and adversity.  Then one day, they decided to change the way their story was being told.  They decided to make a stand.

Meltzer designed these stories to inspire the next generation of heroes.  Get your hands on these books.  Every single one of them.  Your kids will benefit from them, so will you.  It doesn’t matter what your age is, you can learn something from these books.  It will touch your soul and inspire you to be greater than you already are.

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Long Way Down

5 February 20185 February 2018

One of my favorite books of 2017.  Jason Reynolds is a master storyteller and a man of words.  “Long Way Down” may be a quick read, but the message lasts forever inside your heart.  Will’s brother was just shot and killed.  The rules of the hood (no crying, no snitching, and revenge) dictate that he must kill the person that did this to his brother.  He thinks he knows exactly who killed him, so he takes the gun his brother hid away and decides to go after the suspected killer. As he takes the elevator for the short ride down, the lift stops on every floor.  Spirits of people he knew from the past get on.  People that were shot and killed.  Friends.  Playmates.  Family.  Father.  In a matter of sixty seconds, Will has to decide if he is going to have his revenge.  The people getting on the elevator are the ones shaping his decision.

Jason Reynolds is one of the best writers I encountered in 2017.  Everything I’ve read by Reynolds so far is inspiring and very well written.  He blows my mind with his stories and the lessons he is trying to teach the younger generation.  “Long Way Down” was one of the few books I read in 2017 that made it to my curated bookshelves.  This is a story you will keep locked away in your mind thinking this man Reynolds is something else.

[I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  This post contains affiliate links.]

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Miles Morales

19 July 201720 July 2017

This book is due to be released on August 1, 2017.  This is by far one of the best stories I’ve read this year.  I gave it 5 stars because this is more than just a Spider-Man story.  This is about a kid facing adversity, just like every other kid out there.  He may have super powers, but it does not mean that he is not a victim of society.  He is learning how to be a hero, not just a superhero fighting super villains.  Jason Reynolds is an excellent writer.  The story is absolutely incredible.  I had a hard time putting the book down.  I couldn’t wait to get back to reading it again.  This is a must read for everyone.  Get this book for your kids.  Read it yourself.  I don’t like Spider-Man, but I do love Miles Morales.  Excellent read. [PW REVIEW]

[Disclosure: I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for a review.  This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a commission.]  

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Miles Morales: A Book to Get Excited About

19 July 201716 August 2023
Advance Reader’s Copy of “Miles Morales” by Jason Reynolds. Bag of the Day: Fendi.

Book: Miles Morales
Author: Jason Reynolds
Publisher: Marvel Press, Disney Book Group
Release Date: August 1, 2017
Rating: [usr 5.0]

There are very few books I cross paths with that make me very excited to share with everyone.  For Jason Reynolds’ upcoming release “Miles Morales,” I can’t wait for all of you to read this book.

Yes, this is a Spider-Man novel.  Forget Peter Parker, this story is about Miles Morales, a mixed race kid from Brooklyn going to a posh boarding school in Brooklyn on scholarship.  He is a genius with a 4.0 GPA, so smart, the neighborhood speaks of him with pride.  What makes this story unique though, is that this is about rising from adversity and becoming a better person.

Miles is from a poor family.  His dad’s past is that of a common criminal, along with his uncle.  They start off doing a lot of bad things as teens, because they feel like they have no choice.  If they are going to survive, they need to steal and make fast money.

Then one day, Miles’s dad meets a beautiful woman, falls in love and leaves that world of crime for something better.  He wants to have a family that does not need to resort to crime to survive.  They are trying to give Miles a better option in life.

Leaving crime, though, means disowning a brother.  But that doesn’t stop Miles.  He sneaks out to see his uncle, because that’s what you do for family.  During one of those visits, he is bit by a spider, just like Peter Parker.

Going to school has its own challenges.  He works hard at his grades, trying to maintain his 4.0 GPA. He has a work study to help cover the room and board at the school.  He tries so hard to do everything right, but society tries to push him back down.

His history teacher, Mr. Chamberlain, has his own opinions on blacks and slavery.  They are very backwards ideologies.  He makes each teaching lesson a lesson on the importance of black people remaining slaves.  He believes they need to stay within their element and not try to rise above (i.e. go to an elite boarding school).

These lessons disturb the students, but they just put it off as crazy Mr. Chamberlain.  Ironically though, Miles’s spidey sense goes off every single time he is in this class.  Thinking someone outside needs to be saved, he runs out of the classroom (saying he needs to go to the bathroom, which Chamberlain denies) only to find nothing at all.  He ends up getting suspended from school for a week.

He leaves his work study to show up at an open mic night to get extra credit for one of his classes (and pass a poem to a girl he’s crushing on), only to discover the next morning that cans of sausages were stolen during his shift.  Something like this could lead to his expulsion, because they assume he took it because he’s 1) black and 2) poor.  He doesn’t even like canned sausages.




The Message

His father is trying to teach him how to grow up to be a hero to his community first.  When he comes up against all of these problems both at school and in his neighborhood, the question becomes what type of person will he be.  Will he turn bad or good in the end?

This book is mainly about the challenges many people face across America.  It is about learning how to be a hero, no matter who you are or where you are from.  You do not necessarily have to be a superhero with powers in order to be a hero.  Sometimes just helping out your community, picking up trash, and helping your neighbors is part of being a hero.  You are helping someone else that needs help.  That is what heroes do.

But what is a Spider-Man story without evil villains out to destroy the world?  Oh, there are a few bad guys in this book that leads to an epic fight scene in the end.  So do not go into this thinking this is just about evil super villains, because this book is more than that.  This book is truly about a boy learning how to be a hero with and without his powers.

The message in the end is that “We can all be heroes.”




The Rating

I give this book 5 stars, because it is so well written and a tremendously awesome story.  I was so absorbed in the story, I couldn’t stop reading it (and this was while I was doing a Game of Thrones binge).

The story is more than just the regular superhero story.  It is a story about a kid trying to be a hero when the world keeps trying to stop him.  It’s hard for a lot of kids to go up against a system that wants to see them fail.  Miles Morales is one of those kids.

Just because he’s Spider-Man, it doesn’t mean that he’s not faced with personal challenges that are similar to so many kids out there.  He is victimized because of his race and his socio-economic class.  There are people that want kids like Miles to fail because they are black or from a bad neighborhood or from a parent that is a known criminal.

His family may struggle, but his father, that known criminal, is trying hard to make sure his son doesn’t turn out like he did.  He changes his life around so that Miles can have a better opportunity.  Miles deserves a chance to be the change.




What I Love

What I love about this story is that Reynolds is teaching kids that they can all be heroes.  It starts in your own neighborhood.  Little things like helping the elderly, cleaning up the streets, or helping your neighbors can result in a positive change in our communities.

Reynolds doesn’t shun the stories of people living in their cars or kids being falsely arrested for crimes they did not commit.  This is the reality in our world.  Having a family member in jail, visiting them in a detention facility and trying to be a family are all part of the story many kids experience.

The author brings the realities around us into this story.  Even superheroes can experience the same adversity as the kid that picks up this book.  What Reynolds is saying to these kids…YOU’RE NOT ALONE.




Final Thoughts

In conclusion, I cannot begin to express how much I absolutely love this book.  I do not even like Spider-Man.  I am a Superman kind of girl.  This story though made me into a Miles Morales fan.

This is an excellent story that should be on everyone’s must read list this year.

[Disclosure: I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for a review.  This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a commission.] 




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