Reviews of the 2025 CSK Author Award winner and honorees.
Twenty-Four Seconds from Now…: A Love Story
by Jason Reynolds
High School Dlouhy/Atheneum 256 pp.
10/24 9781665961271 $19.99
e-book ed. 9781665961295 $10.99
Seventeen-year-old Neon is in his girlfriend Aria’s bathroom, wracked with anxiety because, for the two of them, “tonight is for our first time.” Twenty-four seconds earlier, he was rushing to the bathroom and shutting the door. Twenty-four minutes before that, he arrived at Aria’s house. And twenty-four hours before that…and so on. The unusual narrative device drops readers immediately into the action and then zooms out to contextualize the moment, introducing a fully realized, frequently hilarious cast of characters who offer advice on sex and relationships. Neon’s mother, for example, who has no reservations about loudly discussing pleasure and masturbation with her son—in a crowded diner. His grandmother, who, while telling stories about her deceased husband, advises that “a little imperfection takes the edge off things.” And his well-intentioned friend Dodie, whose explanation of foreplay includes attention to “what he called the…volvo.” Their guidance (aside from Dodie’s, naturally) and obvious love for Neon has helped shape him into an attentive and respectful boyfriend; there’s no betrayal or big interpersonal conflict here. Instead, this is, in Neon’s words, “a special, regular story where two people meet and help each other make something beautiful, at the risk of making a mess.” The simple plot is balanced by Neon’s narration, which sparkles with rhythm and wordplay. RACHEL L. KERNS
From the January/February 2025 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
Black Star [Door of No Return]
by Kwame Alexander
Intermediate, Middle School Little, Brown 384 pp.
9/24 9780316442596 $17.99
e-book ed. 9780316442794 $9.99
Continuing the story of a Black family’s trials, from Ghana to the United States, Alexander (The Door of No Return, rev. 9/22) sets this installment in Jim Crow–era Virginia. Charlene “Charley” Cuffey is an avid follower of baseball’s Negro Leagues and aims to be the first female player in the sport. Her grandfather, the supportive Nana Kofi, listens to Charley’s triumphs on the diamond and tells her about the skill he showed as a swimmer in Ghana. He also teaches her Twi, his native language, and shares his favorite sayings and stories—some stories, anyway. Charley’s parents have decided she’s too young to hear about how Nana Kofi was captured and brought to America, or why “the wonderfuls” (as Nana Kofi ironically calls white people) seem so uneasy around them. When Charley and her best friend, “Cool” Willie Green, challenge the neighborhood bully to a baseball game, it only makes sense that they use the new field in town—but this decision could cost Charley and Willie more than they ever thought possible. Alexander has created a world that fully immerses readers in the time period and keeps them riveted by this family’s continuing story. Charley’s first-person verse narrative (with Nana Kofi’s recollections interspersed in prose poems) incorporates institutions and notable figures from the era, including Marcus Garvey and Mary McLeod Bethune. A memorable and moving second book in the trilogy. EBONI NJOKU
From the September/October 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
One Big Open Sky
by Lesa Cline-Ransome
Intermediate, Middle School Holiday 240 pp.
3/24 9780823450169 $18.99
e-book ed. 9780823457496 $10.99
In 1879, Lettie’s African American family begins a westward journey from Natchez, Mississippi, to Nebraska, where her father seeks a better life for them. “We can’t live free / on someone else’s land / picking someone else’s crop! / I need something to call my own.” Eleven-year-old Lettie, her parents, and her two younger brothers load all they can into a wagon and join a caravan of ten families journeying on flatboat and on foot. Cline-Ransome’s spare free-verse narrative centers three skillfully developed female voices: Lettie; her mother, Sylvia; and eighteen-year-old Philomena, on her way to her first teaching job in Nebraska. Lettie keeps track of the miles and spending on supplies while Sylvia does her best to keep the children’s spirits uplifted. Philomena joins the family in Missouri, gaining passage in exchange for help with cooking and laundry. The treacherous terrain, extreme weather changes, and unforeseen tragedies are overwhelming at times, but the sense of community among the travelers offers a prevailing sense of hope. This is a captivating story about African American homesteaders and their claims to land promised them after the Civil War. PAULETTA BROWN BRACY
From the March/April 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
Black Girl You Are Atlas
by Renée Watson; illus. by Ekua Holmes
Middle School, High School Kokila/Penguin 96 pp.
2/24 9780593461709 $18.99
e-book ed. 9780593461716 $10.99
This poetry collection masterfully encapsulates Watson’s experience of Black girlhood and womanhood. Through an array of poetic styles, she weaves together her personal reflections, celebrating the multifaceted nature of her own upbringing. The poems serve as a testament to the diversity of cultural influences she encountered during her childhood. She describes her identity as coming from “east coast hip-hop and island tradition…Baptist hymns and secular jigs,” embodying the intersectionality of her experiences. While she celebrates her uniqueness (e.g., Renée is the only one in her family whose name origin is not connected to another family member), she honors and respects that she is part of a broader sisterhood of Black women. From biological sisters to “aunties by blood & by choice” and other “knowing women,” the author pays homage to Black women’s collective strength and wisdom. The title poem, appearing after definitions for atlas, especially adds depth, with Watson drawing parallels between Black girls and the Greek mythological figure condemned to hold up the heavens. The collaboration with Holmes, whose magnificent collages accompany Watson’s words, adds a visual dimension that also spans cultures and experiences. The result is a celebration of the complexities of, and the bonds formed through, Black girlhood and womanhood. EBONI NJOKU
From the March/April 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
Read reviews of the 2025 CSK Illustrator Awards here. For more, click on the tag ALA LibLearnX 2025.
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