The W.A.R. & The Words

Stirling Castle 192

Okay, teeensy little confession: I don’t actually read the School Library Journal. Not teaching at present, not a librarian, so it just doesn’t come up under my radar too often, with the hundred and twenty other blogs I read about kids and writing on a daily basis. I can’t do all the journals regularly too, and get anything done: just can’t. Now, I read Bets’ blog, because Da Bird is a blog friend, and I “knew” her when she was just an insane shoe-loving librarian and non-journal-affiliated, but I hadn’t really wandered past any of the other bloggers.

I’ve been missing out.

Especially because this summer, SLJ blogger Amy Bowllan, along with Dr. George Edward Stanley and hopefully Attorney General Eric Holder, declared W.A.R..

Writers Against Racism is an ongoing series of blog posts by writers, readers, professors, librarians, booksellers, illustrators and artists who are passionate and articulate about books and equality, humanity and ethnicity. Poet and author Dr. Zetta Elliot came up with the questions and invited the artists to participate, and is herself featured with a *lesson plan.* Those are gold nuggets on the ground around this time of year, so teachers, check it out!

Culzean 015

I’m completely late to the party, and am reading weeks back to the beginning of August — and commenting. Amy Bowllan is probably wondering who the heck this person is who feels the need to come along two weeks after a post is up and say something — but I think this is a really neat way of continuing the discussion about race and ethnicity and literature and language. Plus, our friend Laura Atkins, a lecturer at Roehampton University, is interviewed, and talks about growing up Caucasian in multiracial Berkeley. Her recently presented paper, “Reflections on White Privilege in the Publication of Children’s Books” discusses how race impacted her work in publishing at Lee & Low. Some interesting stuff, there.

And though I admit that I’d heard about this project without it settling into my brain, it finally came through when Dr. Elliot emailed me. I’m also honored to have been asked, this past week, to participate, along with several other authors and bloggers in the kidlitosphere, so you can look forward to more interesting and revealing discussion on Bowllan’s Blog at the School Library Journal.


X-Posted at Finding Wonderland

6 Replies to “The W.A.R. & The Words”

  1. Good links all! Thanks. I used to read SLJ when I worked in libraries, but now it's hard to make time to visit and read the latest issue when I've got a child in tow.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.