Posts Tagged short stories

Creating Community with Diverse Story Collections

Spring is right around the corner, and along with it comes the blooming of flowers. What better time to highlight anthologies! The Greek word anthology is made up of anthos, which means flowers and logia, which means collections. I invite you to check out these five, recently published short story collections written by rock star authors. While each of these titles focuses on different subjects, voices, identities or ethnic groups, they all embrace themes of community building.  Each stellar story stands on its own but blossoms in the collective storytelling.

 

Black Girl Power: 15 stories celebrating black girlhood. Edited by Leah Johnson. Hyperion, 2024.

Contributing author Kwame Mbalia states, “power is the ability to control a narrative,” and this anthology does just that. These transformational narratives uplift Black girls, and help them build confidence and dream big. Young readers will find much to love in these stories which include, a horror story, poems, fantasies as well as realistic stories. The universal themes such as family expectations, grief, and friendship have wide appeal, as do the strong characterizations.

 

Calling the Moon:16 period stories from BIPOC authors. Edited by Aida Salazar and Yamile Saied Mendez. Candlewick, 2024.

Period power is explored in this group of poems and stories featuring Black, Indigenous, and people of color with different cultural and faith-based beliefs and attitudes towards menstruating. These pieces celebrate how those “who menstruate are in sync with the natural rhythms of humanity and with the luminescent orb floating through space on a monthly cycle,” – Aida Salazar.

 

 

The Door is Open: stories of celebration and community by 11 Desi voices. Edited by Hana Kahn, Little Brown and Co., 2024.

Welcome to the Maple Grove Community Center in New Jersey. Through interconnected stories featuring the diverse world of South Asian Americans, you will find out how a group of kids gathers together to pursue a variety of activities in this space, and also to save it. Light-hearted stories of crushes and friendships are included alongside more serious topics of racism and identity.

 

 

 

A Little Bit of Super: with small powers come big problems. Edited by Leah Henderson and Gary D. Schmidt. Clarion, 2024.

We often think of super powers as being big and flashy – like flying faster than a speeding bullet or being stronger than Hercules. These humorous stories, comics and poems show how kids can use small powers to positively affect their worlds. The variety of powers – shape shifting, ascertaining the ripeness of an avocado, and hearing the thoughts of animals are fun and fascinating. The book champions the idea that each of us possesses a little something special that makes us super.

 

 

 

On The Block: stories of home. Edited by Ellen Oh. Crown, 2024.

Reading these stories is like peeking through the windows of the Entrada apartment building and learning about the interconnected lives of the immigrant families inside. You will observe ghosts, first crushes, bigotry and more. The anthology includes families from Cuba, India, Nigeria and other countries, sharing their stories and food, and depicts a place where new immigrants find friendship, support and safety.

 

 

 

Short Story Collections Selection: 5 Must-Read MG Anthologies

Book turning pages

Winter break can be a great time to dive deep into a novel, but the busyness of the season (and maybe a new gift or two!) can also lend itself to shorter reading experiences.

What better way to sample multiple author offerings than with a collection of stories or essays? Collections like the incredible ones below can also provide a chance to discover a new favorite writer or see an established author branch out in a new genre or style.

Either way, these collections will be sure to entertain and enrich – no matter the time of the year or the amount of time to read.

A Little Bit Super: With Small Powers Come Big Problems Edited by Leah Henderson and Gary D. Schmidt

[Cover of A LITTLE BIT SUPER.]

Everyone knows that superheroes are supposed to have awesome powers like strength or invisibility or flight. But what happens when you’re a mostly regular kid . . . who’s just a little bit super?

In these hilarious and thought-provoking stories from today’s top middle grade authors, fourteen young people are each coping with a recently discovered minor superpower.

The Haunted States of America Edited by SCBWI

[Cover of THE HAUNTED STATES OF AMERICA.]

Every state has an urban legend that evokes fear and curiosity in equal parts, and this collection chronicles all of these logic-defying horrors… strap in for this spooky cross country tour, but be extra careful not to let any of these terrors follow you home.

You Are Here: Connecting Flights Edited by Ellen Oh

[Cover of YOU ARE HERE.]

An incident at a TSA security check point sows chaos and rumors, creating a chain of events that impacts twelve young Asian Americans in a crowded and restless airport.

As their disrupted journeys crisscross and collide, they encounter fellow travelers–some helpful, some hostile–as they discover the challenges of friendship, the power of courage, the importance of the right word at the right time, and the unexpected significance of a blue Stratocaster electric guitar.

Black Boy Joy: 17 Stories Celebrating Black Boyhood Edited by Kwame Mbalia

[Cover of BLACK BOY JOY.]

Black boy joy is…

Picking out a fresh first-day-of-school outfit.

Saving the universe in an epic intergalactic race.

Finding your voice–and your rhymes–during tough times.

Flying on your skateboard like nobody’s watching.

And more! From seventeen acclaimed Black male and non-binary authors comes a vibrant collection of stories, comics, and poems about the power of joy and the wonders of Black boyhood.

Hope Wins: A Collection of Inspiring Stories for Young Readers Edited by Rose Brock

[Cover of HOPE WINS.]

In a collection of personal stories and essays, award-winning and bestselling artists from Matt de la Peña and Veera Hiranandani to Max Brallier and R.L. Stine write about how hope always wins, even in the darkest of times.

From a family restaurant to a hot-dog shaped car, from an empty road on a moonlight night to a classroom holiday celebration, this anthology of personal stories from award-winning and bestselling authors, shows that hope can live everywhere, even–or especially–during the darkest of times.

No matter what happens: Hope wins.

These short stories and essays are the perfect fit for busy times and busier readers – and taking a moment to enjoy them will be sure to improve any season.

 

 

 

Diversity in MG Lit #16 Celebrating Shorts, April 2020

Friends, one thing I’m hearing these days from everyone is how hard it is to focus in the stress of this pandemic. The last thing I want to do is fire out a list of books so that you can feel bad about not having the energy to read them.
This month I’m going to celebrate short stories and traditional tales highlighting some books which have been out for a while, some which are forth coming. I hope that they will be points of comfort in these weeks of sorrow and places of connection and validations where all children can feel seen and understood.
The beauty of the short story is that it can be read in one sitting, and is ideal for reading aloud. It’s a great way to discover new authors or try out a genre that you don’t usually read.
I’m going to start with The Creativity Project by Colby Sharp (LittleBrown, 2018) which is now available in paperback. It’s a collection of writing prompts or story exercises contributed by more than 40 MG authors. Each of them shared their favorite creative spark and worked a prompt given by another author. These are short and sweet. Meant to fire the imagination. If I was still teaching I’d definitely lean on these exercises as a way to keep even my most reluctant writers motivated.
Perfect for the times is the short story collection Hero Next Door edited by Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich. (RandomHouse 2019) This book celebrates courage in all its disguises, and features characters trying their best to make the world a better place.
In a similar vein, Kid Activists: True tales of childhood from Champions of Change by Robin Stevenson Illus. by Allison Steinfeld (Quirk Sept 2020) honors a group of activists dedicated to changing the world. There’s a nice mix here of historical figures like Alexander Hamilton, Helen Keller and Frederick Douglass and contemporary heroes like Malala Yousafzai, Autumn Peltier, Iqbal Masih, and even Emma Watson. There are illustrations throughout and the text is geared toward the younger end of MG readers. While you are waiting for this title to arrive in September, take a look at others in the series Kid Scientists, Kid Artists, Kid Authors and Kid Athletes.
This one comes out in October and is written with a YA audience in mind, but there’s plenty for a mature MG reader to enjoy. Come On In: 15 stories about immigration and finding a home  ed. by Adi Alsaid. It would pair well with Efren Divided by Ernesto Cisneros or the graphic novel When Stars are Scattered by Victoria Jamieson and Omar Mohamed which comes out this week and chronicles the childhood of Omar Mohamed in a refugee camp in east Africa.
Funny Girl: Funnest stories. Ever. by Betsy Bird (Puffin 2018) is my go-to recommendation for reluctant girl readers— a collection of funny stories with girls at heart. It’s not the usual “burp and fart” fare that is squarely targeted at boys. This is a collection of short stories and graphic shorts by women for girls. It’s a great way to keep things light and introduce a new favorite author. Clear back in 2010 Waldon Pond Press started a Guys Read series edited by Jon Scieszka. The first is Guys Read: Funny Business. Its a solid  collection too.
And finally, here are two collections of folk tales to sweep your mind away to far off times and places. A Whisper of the East: tales from Araibia by Franziska Meiners (North/Suoth 2018) has a retro feel with two color printing and an art style reminiscent of woodblock prints. In the back endpaper there is an ABC with words written in Arabic. Spellbound: tales of enchantment from ancient Ireland by Siobhán Parkinson illus, by Olwyn Whelan was first published in the UK. It’s a vividly illustrated collection of fierce and funny stories from an era when fairies and dragons were as common as fish and any child might on a whim turn himself into a bird.