Incoming Resources
- Let's clap, jump, sing, and shout; dance, spin, and turn it out!, games, songs, and stories from an African American childhood, collected by Patricia C. McKissack ; illustrated by Brian Pinkney
- My mother. Barack Obama. Donald Trump. And the last stand of the angry white man, Kevin Powell
- Heavy, an American memoir, by Kiese Laymon
- The N word, who can say it, who shouldn't, and why, Jabari Asim
- The anti-racist vocab guide, an illustrated introduction to dismantling anti-Blackness, by Maya Ealey
- Afrofuturism, a history of black futures, edited by Kevin M. Strait and Kinshasha Holman Conwill ; in association with National Museum of African American History and Culture ; contributions by Reynaldo Anderson, Tiffany E. Barber, Herb Boyd, Ariana Curtis, Eve L. Ewing [and 16 others]
- They can't kill us all, Ferguson, Baltimore, and a new era in America's racial justice movement, Wesley Lowery
- Ordinary notes, Christina Sharpe
- You'll never believe what happened to Lacey, crazy stories about racism, Amber Ruffin and Lacey Lamar
- They can't kill us all, Ferguson, Baltimore, and a new era in America's racial justice movement, Wesley Lowery
- Black Joy, Tracey Michae'l Lewis-Giggetts
- Make good the promises, reclaiming Reconstruction and its legacies, edited by Kinshasha Holman Conwill and Paul Gardullo
- Dear yesteryear, text and photographs curated by Kimberly Annece Henderson ; hand lettering by Ciara LeRoy
- White guilt, how blacks and whites together destroyed the promise of the civil rights era, Shelby Steele
- The Black American experience, by Don Nardo
- You get what you pay for, essays, by Morgan Parker
- And she could be next, directors, Marjan Safinia, Grace Lee
- Truevine, two brothers, a kidnapping, and a mother's quest ; a true story of the Jim Crow south, Beth Macy
- The matter of black lives, writing from the New Yorker, edited by Jelani Cobb and David Remnick
- The Black reparations project, a handbook for racial justice, edited by William A. Darity Jr., A. Kirsten Mullen, and Lucas Hubbard
- The fire this time, a new generation speaks about race, edited by Jesmyn Ward
- The story of Juneteenth, an interactive history adventure
- As black as resistance, finding the conditions for liberation, Zoé Samudzi and William C. Anderson ; foreword by Mariame Kaba
- Just us, an American conversation, Clauda Rankine
- Local color, Oregon Public Broadcasting ; written and reported by Jon Tuttle
- Tears we cannot stop, a sermon to white America, Michael Eric Dyson
- Black in America, Hal Marcovitz
- Wandering in Strange Lands, Morgan Jerkins
- Radical reparations, healing the soul of a nation, Marcus Anthony Hunter
- The black body, Meri Nana-Ama Danquah
- Black on Black, on our resilience and brilliance in America, Daniel Black
- Dear yesteryear, text by and photographs curated by Kimberly Annece Henderson ; hand lettering by Ciara LeRoy
- Black joy, stories of resistance, resilience, and restoration, Tracey Michae'l Lewis-Giggetts
- The fire next time, James Baldwin
- Notable firsts in black American history
- Imagine freedom, transforming pain into political and spiritual power, Rahiel Tesfamariam
- How do you spell unfair?, MacNolia Cox and the national spelling bee, Carole Boston Weatherford ; illustrated by Frank Morrison
- This is the fire, what I say to my friends about racism, Don Lemon
- My grandmother's hands, racialized trauma and the pathway to mending our hearts and bodies, Resmaa Menakem
- Heavy, an American memoir by Kiese Laymon
- Lies about Black people, how to combat racist stereotypes and why it matters, Omekongo Dibinga
- Young, gifted and Black too, meet 52 more Black icons from past and present, words by Jamia Wilson ; illustrated by Andrea Pippins
- The movement made us, a father, a son, and the legacy of a freedom ride, David J. Dennis Jr., in collaboration with David J. Dennis Sr
- My grandmother's hands, racialized trauma and the pathway to mending our hearts and bodies, Resmaa Menakem