
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The Snowy Day wasn’t the first picture book to feature a Black child as its beloved protagonist, but it might be the most visible. When it came out in 1962, it challenged the publishing industry to champion books that depict kids of color. Today, we find ourselves in a moment not so different from the one Ezra Jack Keats was in when he sat down to create The Snowy Day. We are, once again, fighting for the right to let kids read the books they love, and we’re still reminding each other that the characters kids see in those books really matters.
Read a transcript of this episode on our website and check out these great links:
4.7
187187 ratings
The Snowy Day wasn’t the first picture book to feature a Black child as its beloved protagonist, but it might be the most visible. When it came out in 1962, it challenged the publishing industry to champion books that depict kids of color. Today, we find ourselves in a moment not so different from the one Ezra Jack Keats was in when he sat down to create The Snowy Day. We are, once again, fighting for the right to let kids read the books they love, and we’re still reminding each other that the characters kids see in those books really matters.
Read a transcript of this episode on our website and check out these great links:
3,883 Listeners
90,396 Listeners
37,887 Listeners
10,981 Listeners
7,753 Listeners
43,712 Listeners
6,664 Listeners
14,553 Listeners
8,959 Listeners
24,042 Listeners
16,078 Listeners
618 Listeners
1,727 Listeners
722 Listeners
515 Listeners