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7 Books by Black Authors That Should Be Required Reading

When I was in high school, we got to read books about white people in 1920s America, or white people in 18th-century America, or sometimes we’d mix it up and read about white people in Victorian England. Very rarely did we read books by or about people of color. The closest we ever really got was To Kill a Mockingbird, a book about racism from a white person’s perspective. When it came to reading books like I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, well, that was something I had to do on my own time.

And that’s not to say everyone had the same experience I did. Lots of high schoolers get to read BelovedThings Fall Apart, or A Raisin in the Sun. But there’s no denying that reading lists tend to err overwhelmingly white. For every Invisible Man, there are just about a DOZEN The Scarlet Letters, which is a travesty not simply because Nathanial Hawthorne didn’t know when to JUST END THE SENTENCE ALREADY. FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, MAN.

Diversity in required reading is important, not just because it allows nonwhite students a chance to see themselves represented but because the history of literature isn’t nearly as white as certain syllabi would have you believe. So in honor of Black History Month, let’s talk about books by black authors that deserve a place in the classroom.

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