![post image](https://litsy-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/uploads/posts/post_images/2023/06/30/1688164057-649f56d938b13-user-submitted.jpg)
![Pick](https://image.librarything.com/pics/litsy_webpics/icon_pick.png)
I learned so much.
Frederick Joseph is a writer, award-winning activist, philanthropist and marketing professional. This YA book draws on Joseph‘s and 14 other contributors‘ teen experiences to provide teaching moments to white people about the Black experience while also offering people of colour affirmation. It‘s a difficult read at times albeit a necessary one and the start of a conversation but it is short and at times I thought it needed a bit more depth.
Danielle, I love, love, love my swap books and gifts! Thank you so much for putting together such a great box. Thanks, Michelle, for hosting!
School cafeterias! Sad, but true.
I loved this explanation for the young‘uns.
“No choice but to interact while they had lunch”
So true, and I‘m so old! 😂
THIS BOOK SHOULD BE REQUIRED READING!!!! Frederick the author speaks directly to the reader in this book. Talking about how we should be an accomplice in anti-racism and not a bystander. Each chapter features at least one voice from an artist or an activist. This book was very eye opening!
#bookspinbingo free space
My November reads. Loved most of them. Take Me Apart and White Fragility we‘re only ok and Bookishness was too academic. The rest were awesome!! What did you read in Nov?
#novemberwrapup #goodreads