Current:Home > MyAuthor Jerry Craft: Most kids cheer for the heroes to succeed no matter who they are -EverVision Finance
Author Jerry Craft: Most kids cheer for the heroes to succeed no matter who they are
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:37:41
This essay by Jerry Craft is part of a series of interviews with — and essays by — authors who are finding their books being challenged and banned in the U.S.
If you are a parent or a caregiver and your kid reads a book and identifies with the antagonist (you know, the bad guy), then you have not done your job as a parent. There, I said it. This was initially going to be my big finale. But I've decided to start here instead. And here's why: When you think of the books that have been banned over the last few years, most are by or about people of color or the LGBTQ+ community. And in many of these stories, as with my books New Kid and Class Act, the protagonists are the targets of bullying.
But what so many of today's protesting parents and politicians seem to forget is that most kids are kind and empathetic. Most kids root for the underdog. Most kids cheer for the heroes to succeed no matter who they are. It is we adults who turn them into little versions of ourselves — people who look down on anyone who isn't exactly like us. It's the adults who say that books like mine are designed to make white kids feel ashamed of themselves. But nothing could be further from the truth.
Think of many of the classic movies that we watched in our younger days, such as Avatar, Shrek, and ET. What these movies all have in common is that, for the most part, humans are the bad guys. We all cheered for the large blue aliens, a very big green troll, and a little extraterrestrial--characters who would scare us to death in real life. But there are no protests from parents who claim that these movies make their kids feel guilty to be human.
In the thousands of emails and letters I've received since I self-published my first book way back in 1997, not once have I ever heard from a kid who said they felt bad after reading one of my books. They look at the characters from New Kid such as Jordan and Drew (both African American), and Liam (white) as kids they would love to hang out with. These are characters who they dress up as for Halloween or "dress like your favorite book character day" in school. They are characters who inspire their readers to be better and kinder. Characters who even have inspired teachers and librarians to look at their interactions with their students of color in order to improve their relationships.
In fact, just today I received an email from a 13-year-old girl who identifies as being white with autism and other disabilities (her words, not mine). She took the time to write to me because she wanted to tell me that she related to the characters in New Kid because, "I know what it's like to be different at school, and the book helped me." The parents and politicians who fight to ban books like mine will never entertain the idea that our books help kids who feel like outsiders see that they are not alone. They will never see the humor, or the love, that we pour into our pages.
Instead, they invent things that never actually happen in some of the books that they work so hard to ban. They throw out terms such as Marxism even though they couldn't tell you whether it is based on the writings of Karl or Groucho. And I sincerely doubt that anyone who criticizes a middle-grade book for teaching critical race theory (CRT) even knows what this is. I know that I certainly didn't know about CRT when I was accused of teaching it through my book. But this is the same angry mob mentality that will create more authors who feel the need to write their own stories, only to eventually have their books banned.
Meanwhile, when I was a kid, I don't recall any adult ever "protecting me" from the fact that all of the characters who looked like me did nothing but suffer. Most of the Black stories were about the struggle for civil rights, or gang life, or police brutality. Or being enslaved. But I guarantee that when my next book, School Trip, comes out in April that there will be people who won't want to share the book with their students because they "won't be able to relate" to kids of color spending a week in Paris. Which is actually a lot more realistic than a kid thinking that they can be a wizard! Or a cool vampire. Or single-handedly bring down an evil regime in our inevitable dystopian society.
In New Kid, Jordan says to his teacher Miss Rawle, "So it's okay that this stuff happens to me. It's just not okay for me to talk about it." And that sums up so much of what is going on with book-banning. New Kid is the only book to have won the Newbery Medal, the Coretta Scott King Author Award, and the Kirkus Prize; yet I have gotten ten times more press for having my books banned than I have for doing something that no other author has done.
So if your kids want to read a book about any type of kid other than themselves, please let them. If a kid decides that they are the ones who can't relate to a book, they will stop reading it. Trust me. Kids cheer for heroes, they do not identify with bad guys. And finally, (here's my new big finale) if your kids can root for characters who are blue, or green, they can surely root for characters who are black or brown.
Jerry Craft is the author and illustrator of New Kid, Class Act and the forthcoming School Trip. You can find him here.
veryGood! (67299)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- John Calipari confirms departure from Kentucky after 15 seasons as men's basketball coach
- See Lady Gaga and Joaquin Phoenix's Dark Transformations in Joker: Folie à Deux First Trailer
- Stock Up On Your Favorite Yankee Candle Scents, Which Are Now Buy One, Get One 50% Off
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- 'Bridget Jones 4' is officially in the works with Renée Zellweger, Hugh Grant returning
- Kourtney Kardashian's New Photo of Baby Rocky Shows How Spring Break Is About All the Small Things
- Mom left kids for dead on LA freeway after she committed murder, cops believe
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- The View Cohosts Make Emergency Evacuation After Fire Breaks Out on Tamron Hall’s Set
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- New York City to end its relationship with embattled migrant services contractor
- Indiana State's Robbie Avila, breakout star of March, enters transfer portal, per reports
- 18-year-old in Idaho planned to attack more than 21 churches on behalf of ISIS, feds say
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Tennessee Senate OKs a bill that would make it illegal for adults to help minors seeking abortions
- Lady Gaga Sparks Engagement Rumors With Boyfriend Michael Polansky With Applause-Worthy Diamond Ring
- 'Fallout' is coming to Prime earlier than expected: Release date, time, cast, how to watch
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
'You failed as parents:' Families of teens killed in Michigan mass shooting slam Crumbleys
Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story to undergo season-ending shoulder surgery
Right to abortion unlikely to be enshrined in Maine Constitution after vote falls short
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Hank Aaron memorialized with Hall of Fame statue and USPS stamp 50 years after hitting 715th home run
Republican Sen. Rick Scott softens his abortion position after Florida Supreme Court ruling
Crews encircle wildfire on Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota