In this 2018 photo provided by Children’s Aid, Nina Crews, illustrator of “A Girl Like Me,” reads to children at an early childhood education center. (Adriana Alba/Children’s Aid via AP)
CHICAGO (AP) In the world of children’s books, villagers can protect their water from a black snake, dark skin is as beautiful as the night sky, and a little girl’s two puffs of hair can make her feel like she’s floating above the clouds.
Kids are seeing more of these possibilities in the books they read as authors make a bigger push to reflect the diversity around them. Racial diversity in children’s books has been picking up since 2014, reversing a 25-year plateau, according to Kathleen T. Horning, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Cooperative Children’s Book Center.