Not My Idea
A Book About Whiteness
Interviewed on WABE's "Closer Look" in July 2020
Featured in THE NEW YORK TIMES not once, but TWICE between May and June 2020, as well as AUTOSTRADDLE
White people need tools in order to translate this moment of consciousness into meaningful change.This new edition of Not My Idea with bonus activities is a tangible tool by a children’s book author with a great track record for tackling difficult topics.
We can’t dismantle racism and white supremacy without white people—Not My Idea helps kids understand American past and present, and gives them the tools to have a more equal future.
As Ta Nehisi Coates has said on NPR: “If I were a kid right now, I would want to understand, why did they kill Eric Garner? Why is that OK? I don’t need you to make me feel good about that, but I need to know what happened. People deeply underestimate the freedom that comes from at least understanding.”Not My Idea faces whiteness and racism head on and supports children (and grown-ups) as they face it, too.
Not My Idea picks up where Peggy McIntosh’s Invisible Backpack left off and unpacks whiteness for kids.
Every page is beautifully illustrated using found materials. The only thing Higginbotham pays for are glue sticks, demonstrating that all of the tools to narrate one's own story are already in a child's hands.
ANASTASIA HIGGINBOTHAM is the author and illustrator of Divorce Is the Worst, Death Is Stupid, and Tell Me About Sex, Grandma—all part of the Ordinary Terrible Things series. She lives in Brooklyn.
Librarians love her, but not as much as she loves them.