It’s time for another post with my favorite books for your books for the 2025 holiday season. The links below are affiliate links to Bookshop.org. I use the profits to purchase books to donate to low-income diverse schools.
Board Books
I love a good board book. They are more durable and often more affordable than picture books. Here are a few that are worthy of gifting this holiday season.
Braille: Counting is tactile with the Braille and adds great sensory elements with some of the touching parts, and high contrast colors in the book.
Sockeye Silver, Saltchuck Blue and A is for Anemone by Roy Henry Vickers and Robert Budd are authors from Canada. They give us these gorgeous books. The books are full of color and illustrations based in the First Peoples culture from the Pacific Northwest region.
The box set of Families, How We Eat, On-the-Go, Celebrations, & Hair shows children and families in many different forms of diversity. I haven’t seen the board book version of these books, but if they are like the picture book versions they will be fab. The pictures in the book include children with disabilities, from LGBTQ families, multi-racial, and multi-cultural. The pictures in On the Go and How we Eat have children using different feeding aids and mobility aids (respectively).
Picture Books
Lunch Every Day – Civility and kindness is so important to model and teach. This book shares the story of a young kid who is often seen as a bully and having a hard time making friends. He is invited to a party, something that doesn’t happen often because he’s a bully and something unexpected happens. I won’t give away the rest of the story, but it is an important one especially in this political climate. If you have any teacher friends/family in your life, buy a copy for their classrooms, pre-school to high school should be reminded of the message in the book. Yes, high schoolers read and enjoy picture books too.
If you’re looking for a gift for a budding naturalist or biologist, The Land Knows Me, makes a great gift. This non-fiction book shows native plants from the Pacific Northwest area. The plant names are listed in Squamish language and the book describes Indigenous practices around plants.
Little Golden Books are iconic and affordable. They also have done a nice job diversifying their lineup and including BIPOC authors and topics. I found BTS Little Golden Book while on a work trip in Spokane, WA. I also really loved the Michelle Yeoh Little Golden Book. And there are so many other great books by Black and Brown authors including: Simone Biles, Sonia Sotomayor (English or Spanish), Ms Marvel, Ramadan. If you have any KPop fans in your house Little Golden Books has a Blackpink book coming out in a few weeks.
Wrong season, but pick this up for next fall, Day of the Dead ABC / Día de Los Muertos ABC is so good. The text and pictures work together to talk about culture and language. I appreciate the Spanish and English text trade off on which is centered/larger so it more of a bilingual book than a book with two languages.
Winter Holiday Books
An Anishinaabe Christmas shows how an Anishinaabe (Indigenous) family blends cultural practices to celebrate Christmas. The author is the Premier of Manitoba and
Santa’s Gotta Go is hilarious. Santa overstays his welcome with a family and you get to witness the chaos.
The Mexican Dreidel a boy visits his grandmother in Mexico and brings his dreidel. Readers get to see how Hanukkah is celebrated in Mexico. (Not POC authored)
Santa’s Husband is on my favorite book list. Santa and his husband challenge the white heterosexual Santa norms in this comical book. (Not POC authored)
Adult Books
I am hyping up and recommend two brand new releases by friends. First is Ruchika T. Malhotra’s Uncompete. She’s done it again, writing about how when we lift up women and others who are marginalized we’re better off.
The second, is Vu Le’s Reimagining Nonprofits and Philanthropy. Vu is known for his blog NonprofitAF and this book carries a more serious weight than the blog BUT don’t let that deter you. It is an important book to help us reimagine what the third sector (nonprofits) and government can do better.
I read Kuleana a few months ago and still think about it. The book shares the author’s family’s journey to keep land in their Native Hawaiian family and the author’s journey to understand her Native Hawaiian connections even though she doesn’t live in Hawai`i. The book is more than just about land, it is about our spiritual connection to the aina, our responsibility to people displaced from their homelands.
I’m about halfway through Babel and it is captivating. Never have I thought about translation and the etymology of words and meaning. RF Kung nails the sinister aspect of her characters as always which makes for an enjoyable read.
It Rhymes with Takei makes a gorgeous gift book for anyone looking to learn more about LGBTQ history. This graphic memoir follows actor George Takei’s life and gay history in America. I read it over Pride weekend and appreciate LGBTQ history even more now.
Cookbooks
What isn’t to love about 108 Asian Cookies. I haven’t baked out of this cookbook yet, just ogled at the pictures. I have Kat Lieu’s other cookbook and baked out of that one with great results so this one will probably be equally as great.
Good Things by Samin Nosrat features her favorite recipes for family and friends. This cookbook is more of a traditional cookbook versus her first book Salt Fat Acid Heat.
There are so many more books to share, if I get around to it I’ll make a second list with more recs. In the meantime, if you want to see more books I enjoy here is Fakequity’s Bookshop.org link. Happy reading this winter.
Black totebag with words Read Rise Resist in ombre blue to pink font
I meant to put out a spring book list, but that came and went, so now we’ll launch into summer reading. I hope you’re participating in your local summer reading campaigns. A lot of local bookstores, libraries, or online book websites have summer reading campaigns and fun. Choose one, or more, and have some fun reading your way through the summer. Here are a few diverse books to help round out your reading lists.
Serviceberry by Indigenous writer and botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer is a book about resisting consumerism and moving to a gift and sharing economy. For those who are reading NY Times columnist Ezra Klein’s newest book Abundance, make sure to read Kimerer’s book to understand a Native perspective on the same topic. For SPL/KCLS Bingo this fits the Resistance square.
In honor of Asian American Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander month, and for the flower on the cover square, I’ll mention Lei Aloha. The book features different types of Hawaiian lei and how the author reconnected with the art form.
A Little Deeper Read
My friend Susan Lieu’s book The Manicurist Daughter just came out in paperback. She details her journey to understand her mother’s sudden death while undergoing plastic surgery and body acceptance. I really enjoyed her audiobook version since Susan narrated it and she’s a great actor as well. SPL/KCLS Bingo –Grief.
The SPL/KCLS Bingo board has a square for Monsters. The young adult pair of books Healer of the Water Monster and Heroes of the Water Monster are great books. They bring awareness to climate change and the importance of water in our lives. They are written from a Native American perspective.
I finally got around to listening to the audio version of James. It was so good. The tale of Jim, Huckleberry Finn’s companion was worth the read. It fits the Great Escape square.
For censorship or dystopian square the science fiction YA book The Last Cuentista. The story focuses on a doomed society but how a young girl wants to preserve the stories of the past to help the future.
Deep Read
It is the five year anniversary of the murder of George Floyd. I still remember the collective anguish, coupled with COVID, as a call to do better. I wish I could say we’re making progress on racial repair and reckoning. That is why books and learning continue to be important. His Name is George Floyd documents Floyd’s life and how systemically Black people face more obstacles in America.
Picture Books
No list would be complete without a few picture books. Make Your Mark was an interesting read to learn more about tattoo artist and Black history.
Free to Learn tells the story of the landmark Supreme Court case, Plyer v. Doe, that guarantees immigrant students the right to obtain a public education in the US.
Since it is graduation season, The Blur by Minh Lê, or What Will You Be? by Yamile Saied Méndez, are worthy alternative to the Oh the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Seuss. The Blur is great for new parents or preschool graduates. The messages will be lost on young kids but for the adults a tear may fall. Since my kids were born way before these books were published they both have copies of Dr. Seuss book which they take to school at the end of the year to collect signatures and messages like an autograph book. We’ve done this since they were at a childcare center and it’s become a nice keepsake. If I was doing it over again I would have found a BIPOC book to use instead.
I may put out a second list with more titles in a few weeks. I didn’t get around to including cookbooks or other faves I’ve recently read.
*The links above are for my Bookshop affiliate page. The profits are used to purchase books to donate to public schools.
Popping back into your feeds to share some book recommendations for the 2024 holiday season. Whether you’re looking for a book for yourself or a book to give as a gift, there is hopefully a little something for everyone below. Happy reading!
The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World by Robin Wall Kimmerer. I’m about one-third of the way through this book and it radiates much like Kimmerer’s previous book Braiding Sweetgrass. It is a good reminder to get out of consumeristic and transactional ways and to see nature as a reciprocal relationship.
For memoir lovers make sure to give them The Manicurist’s Daughter: A Memoir by Susan Lieu. Susan’s book is filled with grief, raw emotions – tantrums and love, acceptance, and looking forward. A highly recommended book.
Freedom is a Constant Struggle by Angela Davis is a book for the moment and the movement. We’ll need it in 2025 and for the next four years. Get one for you and a friend or colleague to share ideas.
Brittney Griner’s Coming Home, is worthy of a holiday gift for the sports lovers in your life. I don’t read a ton about sports, but I picked this up based on Heidi’s recommendation. I learned so much more about Griner’s time in a Russian jail, wrongfully imprisoned. I also now have a deeper appreciation for women’s professional sports because of this book.
If you’re looking for a fiction read, Heidi (of Color Brave Space fame), recommends Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto. Sometimes we need some mystery in our lives.
Every booklist needs a cookbook recommendation. On the Curry Trail was a delightful read. It was fun to learn about the history of curry and explore different curries from around the world. I enjoy a good cookbook that has recipes that connect food, people, and places in one book. Gift this to someone who is looking for
My resident manga lover recommends I Want to Eat Your Pancreas: The Complete Manga Collection by Yoru Sumino. The title has sparked a heated debate in our house about the title, good books spark debate. The premise of the book centers around the main character having terminal pancreatic cancer and keeping it a secret.
She also recommends Superman Smashes the Klan by Gene Luen Yang. This is a good book for talking about anti-Asian racism and group think in the face of rhetoric and fear – important themes for the coming years.
Tamales for Christmas is a recently released picture book. Based on the author’s childhood experience of watching his Grandma makes thousands of tamales to help the family afford Christmas gifts. It is a lovely picture book and shares how family and community comes together as a support network.
An Anishinaabe Christmas by Wab Kinew shares how a Native Anishinaabe boy interprets his family’s winter traditions. Christmas gets blended into Native traditions.
Santa’s Gotta Go! Had me laughing. In this book Santa is not the model house guest. At the end of the story Santa gotta leave so the family can have some peace back.
For more book recommendations see Fakequity’s Bookshop store link. All of the above links are affiliate links that generate a small profit for Fakequity. I use the profits to donate books to public schools and to support the blog.
I skipped writing this post last year, but this year it seems like a good time to revive the theme. 2024 marked the five-year anniversary of the Carrie and Erin Birthday Book Drive. Carrie is a frequent guest author on the blog.
In 2019, on a whim I decided instead of celebrating my birthday with stuff for me I wanted to donate 40 books to schools in my neighborhood. I vaguely mentioned it on Facebook, Carrie saw the post and text to say she wished she could do the same. Since we both have February birthdays I invited/told her to join me. It worked out great since she brings a disability justice focus which compliments my focus on POC authors — both of which are under-represented in publishing and books.
Piles of books on a table — delivery of books to a middle school
How it works
The short version of how this project works, is for our birthdays instead of accepting gifts or other stuff for ourselves we put together a wishlist of books that match our criteria. Any book we accept has to be by an author of color, or about disabilities. We have rules – the books about disabilities can’t be overly sad, no disability porn, and nothing about people with disability dying. For the books by authors of color, they must be K-12 appropriate. We also request new books or very gently used books.
Our friends and family are generous and have fun choosing books that resonate with them to donate. The books get shipped to me and part of my house becomes a temporary book warehouse. I keep a spreadsheet of what is donated and who sent it. We share the progress on social media and this becomes a fun community project.
In the spring the books are delivered to schools. We have a few schools we consistently donate to their school libraries. It’s been fun to develop relationships with the librarians and teachers at these schools. They know we are bringing high quality books that often help to diversify their school libraries. I often add new releases to our wishlists which can help schools get these books more quickly into the hands of students. I like reading the new releases and know students feel the same.
New this Year
One of the reasons I wanted to re-share this annual project this year is several friends have done similar projects for their birthdays. Nisha, a teacher friend, said she now wants to be like Dolly Parton, and create her own Dolly Parton Imagination Library. For her birthday she held a birthday book drive too and had her family and friends gift her books. She wrapped the books so her first graders could each open a new book for their classroom library refresh. Another friend did the same and invited her friends to bring books to a silent reading party during her birthday and donated them to school libraries.
It’s been so much fun to watch this project grow. Knowing we’re helping to diversify the books students have access to. With people trying to ban books – books mostly about people of color, LGBTQ, and other experiences that make them feel something – it is important to ensure we’re providing access to high quality books where we can.
Science sign, book Nervous to the right on a library shelf
This year we focused on including books by Washington authors of color. This was really fun since it made the connections even more local. A friend who wrote the book Nervous was so thrilled to know her book was heading into the hands of high school students. I was at one of the schools that received her book and saw it prominently displayed in the school library – I’m sure it will be read many times.
You!
I hope this inspires you to do something for your local community. I realize how privileged I am to have so many good friends who embrace this book drive every year. Maybe the something for you is different, such as sharing your favorite POC authored book title with someone else so they learn about it. Or during your birthday you invite someone to trade a book with you so you both learn something new. For me the book drive is about connections and wanting to share something I love with students. I hope you find something that matters to you and share it with others.
Book List
Here are some of the books that were donated. Sharing this list is always a fun part of this blog post since it is such a rich list of titles, authors, and hopefully you find a new book to read.
The coding is mine, apologies for any errors — I tried my best.
Title
Author
School
Race
Disability
Hi’iaka and Panaewa Hawaiian Graphic Legend
Ahuli’i, Gabrielle
Elementary
Native Hawaiian
Head Above Water
Alshammari, Shahd
High School
MENA
1
One Person No Vote
Anderson, Craol
High School
Black
Keep Dancing Through
Boss, Allison Holker and Stephen “tWitch” Boss
Elementary
Black
Fire Keeper’s Daughter
Boulley, Angeline
High School
Native American
Rez Dogs
Bruchac, Joseph
Elementary
Native American
Fall Down Seven Times, Stand Up Eight Times
Bryant, Jen
Elementary
Asian
Empathy is your Super Power
Bussolari, Cori
Elementary
First Gen
Campoverdi, Alejandra
High School
Latino
Ordinary Ohana
Cataluna, Lee
Elementary
Native Hawaiian
1
Chinese Soul Food — Vegetarian
Chou, Hsiao-Ching
High School
Asian
Crying in H Mart
Zauner, Michelle
High School
Asian
Parker’s Big Feelings
Curry, Parker and Jessica Curry
Elementary
Black
Freedom is a Constant Struggle
Davis, Angela Y.
High School
Black
Maria Tallchief, She Persisted
Day, Christine
Elementary
Native American
We Still Belong
Day, Christine
Elementary
Native American
Across a Field of Starlight
Delliquanti, Blue
Invisible
Diaz, Christina
Elementary
Latino
1
Season of the Bruja
Durán, Aaron and Sara Soler
Middle School
Being Ace
Dyer, Madeline
High School
1
Bitter
Emezi, Akwaeke
Middle School
Black
Huda F Are You?
Fahmy, Huda
Middle School
Miss Quinces
Fajardo, Kat
Elementary
Latino
1
Swimming Toward a Dream
Faruqi, Reem
Elementary
MENA
I Will Dance
Flood, Nancy Bo
Elementary
1
Of Blood and Sweat Black Lives and the Making of White Power and Wealth
Ford, Clyde W.
High School
Black
Essential Labor Mothering as Social Change
Garbes, Angela
High School
Asian
Friday I’m in Love
Garrett, Camryn
Middle School
Black
I was Their American Dream
Gharib, Malaka
Middle School
MENA
Ghost Roast
Gibbs, Shawnelle and Shawneé Gibbs, Emily Cannon
Elementary
Black
Samira Surfs
Guiroz, Rukhsanna
Middle School
Asian
I Never Thought of it That Way
Guzmán, Mónica
High School
Latino
Hijab Butch Blues
H, Lamya
High School
MENA
A Day With No Words
Hammond, Tiffany
Elementary
Black
1
We Deserve Monuments
Hammonds, Jas
High School
Black
Sal & Gabi Break the Universe
Hernandez, Carlos
Middle School
Latino
1
Sal & Gabi Fix the Universe
Hernandez, Carlos
Middle School
Latino
1
La Última Cuentista — Spanish
Higera, Donna Barba
Middle School
Latino
The Last Cuentista
Higuera, Donna Barba
High School
Latino
Alebriejes
Higuera, Donna Barba
Elementary
Latino
Push Girl
Hill, Chelsie and Jessica Love
Middle School
1
Say My Name
Ho, Joanna
Elementary
Asian
all about love
hooks, bell
High School
Black
Displacement
Hughes, Kiku
Elementary
Asian
Mango Delight
Hyman, Fra,caswell
Elementary
Quietly Hostile
Irby, Samantha
High School
Black
Good Talk
Jacob, Mira
High School
MENA
The Laughter
Jha, Sonora
High School
Asian
How to Raise a Feminist Son
Jha, Sonora
High School
Asian
All Boys Aren’t Blue
Johnson, George M.
High School
Black
1
Strange Weather in Tokyo
Kawakami, Hiromi
High School
Asian
Jennifer Chan is not Alone
Keller, Tae
Middle School
Asian
Tryout
Keller, Tae
Elementary
Asian
Jennifer Chan is not Alone
Keller, Tae
Elementary
Asian
Stamped YA
Kendi, I and J Reynolds
High School
Black
Our Brave Foremothers
Kennedy, Rozella
Elementary
Black
Rescue & Jessica
Kensky, Jessica and Patrick Downes
Elementary
1
Brown Album Essays on exile and Identity
Khakpour, Porochista
High School
MENA
1
I am the Night Sky
Khan, Hena
Middle School
MENA
Golden Domes and Silver Lanterns
Khan, Hena
Elementary
MENA
Amulet 9
Kibushi, K
Elementary
Asian
Tomorow is New Year’s Day
Kim, Aram
Elementary
Asian
Last Fallen Star
Kim, Graci
Elementary
Asian
Borders
King, Thomas
Elementary
Native American
In the Lives of Puppets
Klune, TJ
High School
Pieometry
Ko, Lauren
High School
Asian
Measuring Up
LaMotte, Lily
Elementary
Asian
Mindy Kim and the lunar new Year Parade (2)
Lee, Lyla
Elementary
Asian
Autum Pelteir, Water Warrior
Lindstrom, Carole
Elementary
Native American
Allergic
Lloyd, Megan Wagner
Elementary
1
When the Stars Came Home
Luby, Brittany
Elementary
Native American
The Unbeatable Lily Hong
Ma, Diana
Elementary
Asian
Revolution of our Time – The Black Panther Party’s Promise to the People
Magoon, Kekla
Middle School
Black
I am a nurse: Color Me Exceptional!
Maheady, Donna
Elementary
5
Mexikid
Martín, Pedro
Elementary
Latino
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store
McBride, James
High School
Black
The Sum of Us
McGhee, Heather
High School
Black
Furia
Méndez, Yamile Saied
High School
Latino
Latinas Celebrating 40 Big Dreams
Menedez, Juliet
Elementary
Latino
The Kindest Red
Muhammad, Ibtihaj
Elementary
MENA
The Last Sakura Tales of the Yuta
Nakanishi, Ashley
Middle School
Asian
Saving Sorya Change and the Sun Bear
Nguyen, Trang
Elementary
Asian
The Magic Fish
Nguyen, Trung Le
High School
Asian
The Light We Carry
Obama, Michelle
High School
Black
Mediocre
Oluo, Ijemoa
High School
Black
Be a Revolution
Oluo, Ijemona
High School
Black
Heartstopper series
Oseman, Alice
High School
1
ADHD for Smart Ass Women
Otsuka, Tracy
High School
Asian
1
My Grandffather’s Song
Quang, Phung Nguyên and Huynh Kim Liên
Elementary
Asian
Dancing Hands, a Story of Friendship in Filipino Sign Language
Que, Joanna & Charina Marquez
Elementary
Asian
1
The Only Way to Make Bread
Quintero, Cristina
Elementary
Latino
There Was a Party for Langston
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
Ain’t Burned All the Bright
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
There Was a Party for Langston
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
Ain’t Burned All the Bright
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
Stuntboy In the Meantime (2)
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
The Last slice a Three Kings Day Treat
Richardson, Melissa Seron
Elementary
Latino
Barely Floating
Rivera, Lilliam
Elementary
Latino
Unearthed, a Jessica Cruz Story
Rivera, Lilliam and Steph C.
Middle School
The Song that Called Me Home
Robertson, David A.
Elementary
Native American
When We Were Alone
Robertson, David A. and Julie Flett
Elementary
Native/Indigenous
Para Chicas Fuertes De Corazón Tierno Y Piel Canela
Rodríguez, Prisca Dorcas Monica
High School
Latino
1
Our Work is Everywhere
Rose, Syan
High School
1
A Quick & Easy Guide to Consent
Rotman, Isabella
Middle School
Grounded
Saeed, Aisha et al
Elementary
MENA
Jovita Llevaba Panalones
Salazar, Aida
Elementary
Latino
Victory. Stand!
Smith, Tommie
Elementary
Black
Nervous
Soriano, Jen
High School
Asian
1
Wilma Mankiller, She Persisted
Sorrell, Traci
Elementary
Native American
1
Give Me a Sign
Sortino, Anna
High School
1
The Autism Friendly Guide to Periods
Steward, Robyn
Elementary
1
The Chance to Fly
Stroker, Ali and Stacy Davidowitz
Elementary
1
Cut Loose!
Stroker, Ali and Stacy Davidowitz
Elementary
1
All my Rage
Tahir, Sabaa
High School
MENA
I am Not Starfire
Tamaki, Mariko
Elementary
Asian
I’m Going to Be a Princess
Taylor, Stephanie
Elementary
Black
Kings of B’More
Thomas, R. Eric
High School
Black
Game of Freedom
Tonatiuh, Duncan
Elementary
Latino
Dear Daughter
Tran, Christina
High School
Asian
Inclusion on Purpose
Tulshyan, Ruchika
High School
Asian
1
Everything is Ok
Tung, Debbie
Middle School
Asian
1
Unordinary
uru-chan
Middle School
Asian
Prince and the Dressmaker
Wang, Jen
Elementary
Asian
1
Not He or She, I’m Me
Wild
Elementary
Kapaemahu
Wong-Kalu, Hinaleimoana, Dean Hamer, and Joe Wilson
Elementary
Native Hawaiian
The Words We Share
Wong, Jack
Elementary
Asian
Mooncakes
Xu, Wendy
Elementary
Asian
1
A Nest in Springtime – Bilingual Book of Numbers
Yang, Belle
Elementary
Asian
Lunar New Year Love Story
Yang, Gene Luen
Middle School
Asian
American Born Chinese
Yang, Gene Luen
Elementary
Asian
Superman Smashes the Klan
Yang, Gene Luen
Elementary
Asian
Lunar New Year Love Story
Yang, Gene Luen and Leuyen Pham
High School
Asian
Jar of Fat
Yim, Seayoung
High School
Asian
The Sun is Also a Star
Yoon, Nicola
High School
Mixed
Rainbow Shopping
Zhuang, Qing
Elementary
Asian
Being Seen
High School
1
This Place 150 Years Retold
High School
Native/Indigenous
Breathe and Count Back from Ten
High School
1
Mighty Mara
Elementary
Asian
1
A Spot of Worry
Elementary
1
Link to the list on Google Spreadsheets in case the list doesn’t show up or isn’t screen reader friendly.
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Black background words in blue to pink ombre Read Rise Resist.
A few weeks ago, a friend sent a text asking for suggestions for books on leadership. I messaged her a few titles and decided to expand on what I sent her to make this a full-fledge blog post.
The list is a mix of books. Some can be seen as traditional leadership type books, and others are books that I think have a lot of value for understanding how to ‘lead’ in diverse ways. All of the titles listed are by authors of color.
The Purpose of Power: How We Come Together When We Come Apart by Alicia Garza. Alicia Garza is a longtime organizer and was one of the founders of the Black Lives Matter movement. She shares her journey around organizing and how she ended up in the Black Lives Matter movement.
Eric Liu’s You Are More Powerful Than You Think is a nice companion to Alicia Garza’s book. Liu writes about political advocacy and how to understand power and use it for social good. His book and approach are good for understanding how to work to move institutional power bases.
Treaty Words: For as Long as the River Flows may make you wonder why this made the list. I consider it an important leadership book, because we have to remember leadership in the western world is just that – built on western concepts of capitalism, ownership, top down structures. We should learn from other communities about their values and ways of leading. Indigenous and Native people’s have relationships and reciprocal treaties we need to learn from and honor. This short but full-of-thoughtful words and pictures book is a good way to reframe how we think about leading.
If you’re going to lead, you need to understand disabilities and how to lead in the least ableist ways possible. Alice Wong’s Disability Visibility is a collection of first person narratives by people with diverse backgrounds and disabilities. It is a good starting point for learning more about disabilities. If you have a young adult in your life the young adult version of this book is very accessible and worth sharing with a young person too.
The Art of Gathering and Together are two books I highly recommend for leaders who convene people. I can’t think of any leader who doesn’t convene people in some way. These two books reframed how I think about bringing people together and working with people, especially people of color, in ways that are natural but also purposeful.
I haven’t read First Gen by Alejandra Campoverdi yet but it is on my list of books to read. I’m adding this to my list of books to learn from because I work in education and need to learn about how to create better systems for immigrants and to make sure Latino/Latinx students are visible. This is a leadership book because we should learn from first hand accounts.
What are some of your favorite books about leadership by authors of color?
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