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Black Horror Icons by Francesco Francavilla
Upcoming 2018 Barbie Fashionistas (courtesy of Papusile Mele FB)
A few interesting choices here. Nice to see the Teresa mold back in this wave, very dark skinned AA doll (but no articulation :() and the doll with the aftro on the top right. Â
Christmas room shenanigans by back2s0ul Via Flickr: A work in progress
Curvy Collection!
When Mattel first announced the new Barbie body types, I was thrilled to see the curvy one. As of this post, Iâm only missing one curvy Barbie (to my knowledge) that has been released in the united States - the Barbie Look metallic mini Black Label one.
So behold, in honor of Shelfie Saturday, my curvy Barbie collection! All dolls in their original clothes, except the two on the end in the back, which are custom ones (and yes, one is in Christmas attire for the holidays lol).
Marvel Legends | Black Panther Wave
Up for preorder now!
taylor: im sorryâŠ.. the old taylor cant come to the phone right now.. why? oh bc sheâs dead! everyone else:
op moetu
https://instagram.com/p/BKHOg_ohTeT/
Seeing reflections of yourself in the fiction you love is one of the most powerful forms of affirmation we have in popular culture
Bryan Hill, Why diversity matters to all of us
(Read the whole article and consider following diversecomics)
Yo, why is Black Panther always the go-to in this reverse cast-ism argument? Black Manta would have been the perfect misdirect for that complaint. Whenever I see this âsolutionâ I instantly think of the Black characters that were created by Marvel and DC Comics alike, for just this purpose, that are nowhere to be seen today. The problem with this assembly line of creating more and more new characters is that we end up with an abundant number of diverse characters with potential that become stuck in comic book limbo. âThey literally become raisins in the sun, presented for the moment then left to dry out. There are so many characters of color created to have their stories told, onceâ Comic book limbo is basically the upside down from Stranger Things, where characters hang out in obscurity, which is why seeing a Black MJ, Ben Urich, or Nick Fury matters because if you grew up as a person of color and a comic book fan, you had no idea when you were going to see your favorite character again!
@omarholmon, âWhat Happens To A New Black Character Deferred?â [x] (via blacknerdproblems)
Gugu Mbatha-Raw in Belle (2013) dir. Amma Asante
âI was somewhat frustrated, I have always loved period dramas and my friends were in these gorgeous-looking Jane Austen adaptations. I would be like, âI have all of this training, when will I get a chance to explore that side?ââ
a concept: fostering an environment where people are motivated to learn out of genuine yearning for knowledge rather than a competitive and high pressure system in which being anything other than âthe bestâ makes people feel like a failure by default thereby discouraging people from their love for learning and creating a generation of people who are unhappy with themselves based on arbitrary measures of intelligenceÂ
^^^^^^^^^^^^
How to Find a FoxÂ
Author: Nilah MagruderÂ
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
Release Date: November 15, 2016
Equipped with a camera and determination, a little girl sets out to track down an elusive red fox. But foxes are sneaky, and it proves more difficult than she thought. Nilah Magruderâs debut picture book charmingly tells the story of what it means to not give up and how sometimes what youâre looking for is closer than you think.
Authorâs PhotoÂ
Find more picture books by Black authors here Â
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The Golden Girls of RioÂ
Author:Â Nikkolas SmithÂ
Publisher: Sky Pony Press
Release Date: November 15, 2016
The women athletes of the 2016 Summer Olympics captivated the worldâŠTheir accomplishments amazed us, as did their personal stories of persistence and hard work. The Golden Girls of Rio focuses on the paths to glory for these women athletes, how they got their start and rose to meteoric heights in the Rio gamesâŠAn inspiring story, bursting with color and action and life, that will make you smile to see these champion athletes as little girls, and to revisit their triumphs in achieving Olympic gold.
Authorâs PhotoÂ
Find more picture books by Black authors here
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Hidden Figures Young Readersâ EditionÂ
Author: Margot Lee ShetterlyÂ
Publisher: HarperCollins
Release Date: November 29, 2016
Before John Glenn orbited the earth, or Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, a group of dedicated female mathematicians known as âhuman computersâ used pencils, slide rules, and adding machines to calculate the numbers that would launch rockets, and astronauts, into space. This book brings to life the stories of Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, and Christine Darden, four African-American women who lived through the civil rights era, the Space Race, the Cold War, and the movement for gender equality, and whose work forever changed the face of NASA and the country.
Authorâs PhotoÂ
Find more middle-grade books by Black authors hereÂ
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All Things Considered editor and childrenâs book maven Justine Kenin is VERY excited about They All Saw a Cat â a new picture book that depicts all the many ways various creatures perceive a cat out on a stroll. Hereâs her review:
 A great picture bookâs magic sneaks up on you.Â
It becomes the book you want to read again and again. The story may seem simple at first pass â itâs for the non-reading set after all â but then you hear it in your head, and see the images in your mind.Â
Each picture takes long minutes to absorb, and reveals new details each time you open the book. And a great picture book  âlike Brendan Wenzelâs new They All Saw a Cat â reveals a secret about life itself.
Wenzel both wrote and illustrated Cat. His words bring a steady rhythm and repetition so perfect for the picture book reader â the words build, the reader anticipates, the beat is the same as you turn each page.Â
The book opens with a picture of a lanky, striped feline headed off for adventure: âThe cat walked through the world, with its whiskers, ears, and paws âŠâ Â
And the great surprise is the âTheyâ of the title. What and who will the cat encounter? A dog, a mouse, a flea â the cat encounters friends, mortal enemies, and possible meals. But how does each creature see the cat?
My personal favorites are the bee, seeing the cat with all of its eyes. And the fish, for whom the cat is oh so big and watery.
But I donât want to give too much away.
Just know that as you read this book your two-year-old will understand that we all see a cat. That each animal sees the cat differently â but itâs still a cat, and our perspective shapes how we it, whether weâre hungry to eat it or view it from high in the sky.
And does that cat see himself? Yes, and that perspective is also perfect.
â Petra (who sees too many cats, whenever she goes home)
Thanks, NPR! Weâre pretty excited about They All Saw a Cat too.