Family Feast, on the Road with Kin

We’ve got a few more appearances before the holiday season: Arlington, Virginia; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Washington, DC for the African American Civil War Museum Descendants Conference; and Denver, Colorado for National Council of Teachers of English conference. NCTE meets the week before Thanksgiving, so I’m planning ahead for my family feast. I’m prepping not only for the big meal but also to keep bellies full all weekend. These recipes are among my faves. What’s cooking at your house? Share in the comments section below.

How fitting that our One Maryland One Book (OMOB) tour for Kin: Rooted in Hope coincided with Family History Month and Banned Books Week. Kin traces our family’s lineage to 1770 on the largest enslavement plantation in Maryland and to two all-Black Reconstruction era villages that they co-founded. Jeffery and I collaborated on the book in a quest that culminated with this epiphany.

Knowing your history is generational wealth.

The OMOB tour began at Riversdale House Museum in Riversdale, Maryland with a pop-up exhibition of Jeffery’s art from the book juxtaposed with furniture and artifacts throughout the one-time plantation. Together, we discussed the book and shared favorite poems.

The next stop was Chesapeake College in Wye Mills, Maryland on the Eastern Shore where the book is set. My dear friend, Harriette Lowery, a co-founder of the Frederick Douglass Honor Society, moderated the discussion which was livestreamed. A record crowd greeted us. We appreciate all the love.

Our busiest day–on Maryland’s Western Shore–included stops at the College of Southern Maryland in La Plata and St. Mary’s College of Maryland in St. Mary’s City. The reception at the College of Southern Maryland featured such local delicacies as quick-pickled watermelon rind. Delish! Here’s a recipe.

We ended the week at Morgan State University in my hometown–Baltimore. Thanks to the Department of English and Foreign Languages and new chair Dr. DeMaris Hill for hosting our appearance.

Although our official tour wrapped up, discussions of Kin continue across the state. Jeffery and I attended the Berlin Book Festival (Maryland, not Germany!). Berlin was the birthplace of the subject of By and By: Charles Albert Tindley, the Father of Gospel Music, my first collaboration with Bryan Collier. I dropped in on a book club meeting at Edenwald senior living community in Towson, and we both spoke at the Maryland Lynching Memorial Conference at the Reginald F. Lewis Maryland Museum of African American History and Culture.

We’re eager to discuss Kin in secondary schools and with book clubs. Download the Kin reading guide here.

“History does not repeat itself, but it rhymes.”–Mark Twain

Mark Twain’s words resonate with me not because I am a poet and a history buff but because today’s headlines sometimes feel ripped from the past. My poetic books on historical subjects help young readers connect the dots between past and present. Thus, the poems below from Jesse Owens: Fast Man Alive and Outspoken: Paul Robeson, Ahead of His Time–A One-Man Show could not be more timely. Both books are illustrated by my frequent collaborator, Eric Velasquez. Jesse Owens is set during the 1936 Berlin Olympics when Nazism was on the rise. Outspoken is a full biography of entertainer and activist Paul Robeson, who was blacklisted and barred from performing after testifying before the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s.

You are not meant to see
the concentration camps
that hold free-thinking souls
who dared to challenge Hitler’s rise.
***
This is not war–not yet.

From JESSE OWENS

You want to shut up every Negro
who has the courage to stand up and fight
for the rights of his people, for the rights of workers.

From OUTSPOKEN

Download a free teachers guide for Outspoken here.