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The Rise Of The Well-Read Black Girl Book Club

Glory Edim, the founder of the Well-Read Black Girl book club and community, has edited a new collection of essays by black woman authors.
Mike Coppola
/
Getty Images for Instagram
Glory Edim, the founder of the Well-Read Black Girl book club and community, has edited a new collection of essays by black woman authors.

The way Glory Edim tells it, it all began with a T-shirt. It was a birthday present from her partner, bearing a simple statement: "Well-Read Black Girl."

The shirt was also embellished with names of some Edim's favorite black women authors, from Toni Morrison to Gloria Naylor. It attracted a lot of attention.

"I would be wearing the T-shirt in public spaces in New York City," she says. "And as you know, we tend to be in close proximity to each other all the time. So sitting on the subway talking to people, and black women coming up to me and asking me about where I got the T-shirt, who my favorite author was — it just started these very natural conversations."

Edim wanted those conversations to continue. So she started a book club that focused on black women — both readers and writers.

"So if you want to come and join and talk about black women writers, you're more than welcome," Edim says. "If you want to talk about Ernest Hemingway, this might not be the book club for you."

It grew. She started inviting authors to come and discuss their books. She set up an Instagram account and began publishing a newsletter. Before she knew it, she had created a genuine phenomenon.

Over the weekend, Well-Read Black Girl held its now-annual literary festival in Brooklyn, N.Y. This year, it coincides with the publication of an anthology of essays, edited by Edim and written by other black women authors. It's called Well-Read Black Girl: Finding Our Stories, Discovering Ourselves.

Carla Bruce-Eddings, a book publicist and freelance writer, is one of those authors. She heard about the book club from a friend and attended one of the early meetings.

"It really feels like taking a long exhale," Bruce-Eddings says. "They're very informal. We sit in a circle. And it's just such a comforting and welcoming space."

Author Stephanie Powell Watts was invited to discuss her book No One is Coming to Save Us. She loved the energy of the group.

"It feels like a found thing," Powell Watts says. "You know how when you're listening to your radio and a song you love comes on and it just feels like it's so — it's just meant for you that day? It feels like you've discovered something amazing and wonderful that was designed for your good."

Both Powell Watts and Bruce-Eddings contributed to the Well-Read Black Girl anthology. Other writers in the collection include Jesmyn Ward, Tayari Jones and Jacqueline Woodson.

Everyone was asked to answer the question: When did you first see yourself in literature? Edim posed that question even though she had a slight reservation about it.

"Originally I thought that everyone would have a different story about Toni Morrison," Edim says. "Which would have been incredible, but that was a little bit of the fear. Will everyone write the same story about The Bluest Eye? Will it sound repetitive? And that was not the case at all."

Some did first see themselves in well-known authors like Zora Neale Hurston or, yes, Toni Morrison. But the inspirations were wide ranging, from James Baldwin to books about witches and magic.

Stephanie Powell Watts, who was raised as a Jehovah's Witness, wrote about the Bible stories she learned as a child.

Carla Bruce-Eddings loved the children's book Amazing Grace by Mary Hoffman, about a girl named Grace who was told she could not play Peter Pan in a school play because she was black and a girl. Grace wouldn't let anyone impose those limitations on her.

"Grace is, ultimately, who I landed on, but it wasn't so much because I saw myself in her completely," Bruce-Eddings says. "It was because she was who I aspired to be."

Bruce-Eddings says she always comes back to Grace when she is assessing her life and thinking about who she wants to be.

"I have a 3-year-old daughter right now," she says. "And when I was building her library, I realized that I'd lost my old copy of Amazing Grace, so I immediately ran out and bought another one. And as I was reading it to my daughter for the first time, tears came to my eyes because it just felt like I was home in a way, and I was realizing all these things about myself that I had made peace with. And now I was able to pass her on to my daughter."

Bruce-Eddings was at the Well-Read Black Girl festival on Saturday, surrounded by people like her who love to read and write and talk about books. And presiding over it all was Glory Edim — the original well-read black girl.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Lynn Neary is an NPR arts correspondent covering books and publishing.