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Carole Boston Weatherford and the Story of Unspeakable

The new picture book from celebrated author Carole Boston Weatherford and the award-winning illustrator Floyd Cooper, Unspeakable: The Tulsa Race Massacre, comes to bookshelves everywhere on February 2nd.

Keep scrolling to watch Carole Boston Weatherford discuss the socio-emotional importance of telling stories like Unspeakable, and mark the calendar with her upcoming events!

With the coming of Black History Month, Unspeakable pays tribute to the untold story of the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921. The book traces the history of African Americans in Tulsa’s Greenwood district and chronicles the devastation that occurred when a white mob attacked the Black community.

News of what happened was largely suppressed, and no official investigation occurred for seventy-five years. This picture book sensitively introduces young readers to this tragedy and concludes with a call for a better future. This story must be told, and here is author Carole Boston Weatherford to tell us why!

Events

Don’t miss the opportunity to hear Carole speak again. She’ll be appearing at several virtual events over the next few weeks including:

The Reading and Writing Project: Black History IS American History: Grades K-9

The African American Children’s Book Fair

The Ivy Bookstore – Baltimore, MD virtual visit

Community Book Center – New Orleans, LA

Multicultural Children’s Bookstore – Richmond/San Francisco, CA virtual visit

The Dock Bookshop – Fort Worth/Dallas, TX virtual visit

The Frugal Bookstore virtual visit!

Spread from Unspeakable

Praise for Unspeakable

★”Ideal for classroom libraries and a deeper study of American history, this title is a must-have for those seeking the painful and complete truth.”—starred, Booklist

★”Unspeakable deserves to be read by every student of American history.” —starred, BookPage

★”A somber, well-executed addition to the history as the incident approaches its 100th anniversary.”—starred, Kirkus Reviews

★”[S]ucceeds in teaching the tragedy of the Tulsa Race Massacre and the legacy of Black Wall Street.”—starred, Publishers Weekly

★”This moving account sheds light on shameful events long suppressed or ignored. All collections should consider this title’s value in providing historical context to current conversations about racism and America’s ongoing legacy of white supremacy.”—starred, School Library Journal

★”Far from romanticizing history, Weatherford is equally descriptive in explaining how a false accusation of assault brought simmering racial tensions to a violent end . . . Cooper’s illustrations (‘oil and erasure’) are the perfect partner to this history, the sepia-toned images resembling historical photographs. The portraits of Black residents are particularly moving, seeming to break the fourth wall to implore the reader to remember their story.”—starred, The Horn Book Magazine

Upcoming Teaching Guide!

The Unspeakable teaching guide was developed by Dr. Sonja Cherry-Paul—educator, author, co-founder of the Institute for Racial Equity in Literacy, and director of diversity and equity at the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project at Columbia University. Sign up here to receive a link to the teaching guide when it is available.

More Resources and Reading

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