
I used to say I’d be a teacher or a lawyer or a hairdresser when I grew up but even as I said these things, I knew what made me happiest was writing. I wrote on everything and everywhere. I remember my uncle catching me writing my name in graffiti on the side of a building. (It was not pretty for me when my mother found out.) I wrote on paper bags and my shoes and denim binders. I chalked stories across sidewalks and penciled tiny tales in notebook margins. I loved and still love watching words flower into sentences and sentences blossom into stories. I also told a lot of stories as a child. Not “Once upon a time” stories but basically, outright lies. I loved lying and getting away with it! There was something about telling the lie-story and seeing your friends’ eyes grow wide with wonder. Of course I got in trouble for lying but I didn’t stop until fifth grade. That year, I wrote a story and my teacher said “This is really good.” Before that I had written a poem about Martin Luther King that was, I guess, so good no one believed I wrote it. After lots of brouhaha, it was believed finally that I had indeed penned the poem which went on to win me a Scrabble game and local acclaim. So by the time the story rolled around and the words “This is really good” came out of the otherwise down-turned lips of my fifth grade teacher, I was well on my way to understanding that a lie on the page was a whole different animal—one that won you prizes and got surly teachers to smile. A lie on the page meant lots of independent time to create your stories and the freedom to sit hunched over the pages of your notebook without people thinking you were strange. Lots and lots of books later, I am still surprised when I walk into a bookstore and see my name on a book’s binder. Sometimes, when I’m sitting at my desk for long hours and nothing’s coming to me, I remember my fifth grade teacher, the way her eyes lit up when she said “This is really good.” The way, I—the skinny girl in the back of the classroom who was always getting into trouble for talking or missed homework assignments—sat up a little straighter, folded my hands on the desks, smiled and began to believe in me.
Series
Books

A Way Out of No Way
1996

Between Madison and Palmetto
1993

Coming on Home Soon
2004

We Had a Picnic This Sunday Past
1997

The Day You Begin
2018

The Other Side
2001

Martin Luther King, Jr., and His Birthday
1990

Before the Ever After
2020

The Year We Learned to Fly
2022

Harbor Me
2018

This Is the Rope
A Story from the Great Migration
2013

The House You Pass on the Way
1997

Locomotion
2003

Another Brooklyn
2016

Lena
1999

Beneath a Meth Moon
An Elegy
2012

The World Belonged to Us
2022

Each Kindness
2012

Maizon at Blue Hill
1992

I Hadn't Meant to Tell You This
1994

Well-Read Black Girl
Finding Our Stories, Discovering Ourselves
2018

Our Gracie Aunt
2002

Behind You
2004

Pecan Pie Baby
2010

Am I Blue?
Coming Out from the Silence
1995

Before Her
2019

If You Come Softly
1998

Sweet, Sweet Memory
2000

Feathers
2007

Show Way
2005

Remember Us
2023

Autobiography of a Family Photo
1995

Peace, Locomotion
2009

Brown Girl Dreaming
2014

The Distance
2012

Miracle's Boys
2000

The Letter Q
Queer Writers' Notes to their Younger Selves
2012

Fight of the Century
Writers Reflect on 100 Years of Landmark ACLU Cases
2020

Red at the Bone
2019

Flying Lessons & Other Stories
2017

Last Summer with Maizon
1990

21 Proms
2007

Hush
2000

We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices
2018

If You Come Softly and Behind You
2010

After Tupac and D Foster
2008

The Dear One
1991

Visiting Day
2001

From the Notebooks of Melanin Sun
1995