Black women will save the world An anthem

April Ryan, 1967-

Book - 2022

White House correspondent April Ryan presents a vital look at women of different ages and backgrounds who devote their lives to making the world a better place, even if that means stepping out of their "place."

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  • Foreword
  • Preface Extraordinary Ordinary
  • Introduction What's at Stake
  • Section I. The Power How We Lead and Why
  • Chapter 1. The Superpower of Sisterhood
  • Chapter 2. How Not to Be Erased
  • Chapter 3. Walking the Tightrope
  • Section II. The Price What We Endure, How we Overcome
  • Chapter 4. Our Fight
  • Chapter 5. Our Sacrifice
  • Chapter 6. Our Voice
  • Section III. The Promise What's Next for us and America
  • Chapter 7. "A Little Child Shall Lead Them"
  • Chapter 8. Healing
  • Chapter 9. What's Next
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

White House correspondent Ryan's "anthem" celebrates Black women who have made enormous contributions to American history but who have been unappreciated in history and media coverage. Throughout the book, one of America's most influential Black women shares testimonies about experiences and efforts made to protect democracy, identity, and communities. Ryan also provides personal stories about overcoming personal obstacles due to being Black, female, and underprivileged in the world of journalism and reveals how the next generation of Black women is redefining expectations. She hopes this book will start a conversation about what it means to respect Black women, to celebrate their leadership and hold space for their vulnerability, which is a big step toward alleviating Black women of oppression and helping them heal individually and collectively. The goal of this book is to "elevate and exalt Black women as the sheroes and world shapers they are and always have been." Ryan specifies, "When Black women fight, we don't fight for just us----we fight for everyone." An inspirational ode for Black women and everyone else interested in women's history and the Black experience.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Ryan (The Presidency in Black and White) mixes memoir and history in this passionate look at how Black women leaders combat racism and sexism in "a world that wasn't built for them but needs them more than ever." Praising a litany of "sheroes" for their leadership, sacrifices, and commitment, Ryan notes that three Black women--Vice President Kamala Harris, Supreme Court justice Ketanji Brown-Jackson, and White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre--currently hold positions at the highest levels of government. Ryan also reflects on Black women's strength as a crucial but unacknowledged building block for American democracy; details grassroots efforts to combat "micro- and macro-aggressions inside and outside the home"; reflects on her own battles against sexism and racism as a single mother and the only Black woman in the White House press corps until 2018; and profiles historical figures (abolitionist Harriet Tubman; presidential candidate Shirley Chisholm) and contemporary leaders (gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams; California congresswoman Maxine Waters). At times, Ryan's prose reaches a prayer-meeting fervency, extolling Black women as "truth-tellers" who "mobilize the conscience of a country that is too slow to act on what's right." Forceful and inspired, this is a rousing praise song for strong Black women. Agent: Peter McGuigan, Ultra Literary. (Oct.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

A White House correspondent for more than three decades who was named Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists in 2017, Ryan reflects on the watershed year 2020--when the United States elected its first Black woman vice president--as she celebrates the resilience of Black women and recalls her own triumphs and challenges. With a 60,000-copy first printing.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A veteran journalist honors the contributions of Black women in America. In this "anthem" or "love letter," Ryan, the Washington, D.C., bureau chief for the Grio, combines an account of her struggles and triumphs as a person of color with a survey of representative Black women who epitomize "our history, our heroism, our hurt, and our Hope." First, the author looks at the characteristics and motivations of Black leadership; second, the intersection of race and gender as they play out in the efforts of Black women to claim agency in social and political spheres; and finally, speculations on the coming ascendancy of such women in positions of power. Though she moves fluidly across eras, Ryan focuses primarily on her role as a top White House correspondent during the Trump era and her reporting of--and sometimes personal involvement in--a range of stories prompted by his incendiary reign. Among the most memorable sections of the book are her response to the White supremacist terrorist attack in Charlottesville and her own often caustic exchanges with Trump and his representatives during press conferences. Ryan is particularly effective in evocatively setting forth the terms of her calling as a journalist. She argues convincingly that her career has been dedicated to posing questions too often slighted or silenced: "Questions about civil rights. Policing. Migration. Sex trafficking. Poverty. Fairness and equality before the law." Also cogent are her accounts of recent efforts at voter suppression and the resistance being organized by formidably committed activists. A little more nuance might have been helpful in the author's assessments of the status of a leader such as Kamala Harris, whose reputation among Black voters seems more complicated than Ryan implies. Overall, though, the author offers compelling commentary on the significance of Black women in contemporary America. An impassioned celebration of Black women and their roles in transforming the nation. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.