Turn the Page and
You Don't Stop: Sharing Successful Chapters in Our Lives
with Youth
Edited by Patrick M. Oliver
Say It Loud! Books
Paperback, $12.00
156 pages
ISBN: 0-9779499-0-7
Book Review by Kam Williams
"Why read?
Reading isn’t just for sissies, or nerds or geeks.
Research shows that young people involved in
after-school programs, especially reading programs, are
far more likely to become productive citizens.
It is because of my first-hand experience with
children and youth, watching them change before my eyes
as they learned to read and grasp what they had read; it
is because of the many parents and educators who
articulated their desperation to find ways to help their
children read, that Turn the Page and You Don't Stop was
born.
It is my hope that this anthology will give children
and youth a reason to pick up that next book, or that
pen and pencil. I hope that parents and teachers will
use this treasure of stories and essays to instill in
children and youth a love of words, stories, and books."
Excerpted
from the Introduction
There is an old Jesuit saying which goes,
"Give me the child until he is
seven, and I will show you the man." If you believe
the words of that wise maxim, then you know that early
intervention is the answer to the woeful literacy and
high school graduation rates which come to permeate the
African-American community.
For some reason, reading isn’t generally considered
cool among most black teens, especially males, in
inner-city schools, a self-destructive attitude which
only lessens their prospects for success later in life.
Fortunately, Patrick Oliver has staked his career on
reversing this suicidal trend. Oliver, co-founder of the
Black Male Development Symposium, has been making
significant inroads as the director of the Open Book
Program, a city-wide reading project in Chicago.
And now he has decided to share his strategy with the
rest of the country as editor of Turn the Page and You
Don't Stop: Sharing Successful Chapters in Our Lives
with Youth, a valuable how-to book designed to inspire
youngsters with an interest in reading. He makes his
case first by pointing out that even entertainment icons
must master the language, citing Grammy-winner Erykah
Badu who studied theater at Grambling State University
and the late gangsta rapper Tupac Shakur who attended
the Baltimore School of the Performing Arts.
Then, the author allows each of his 26 contributors
(including Dr. Julianne Malveaux, Haki Madhubuti and
Patrice Gaines) to write a chapter aimed at whetting a
thirst for knowledge in impressionable adolescents.
Though the collaborators’ styles range from the lyrical
poetry of Parneshia Jones, E. Ethelbert Miller and D.H.
Melhem to the revealing memoirs of Gaines, Madhubuti,
Latoya Wolfe and Sandra Govan to the imaginative fiction
of Ivory Achebe Toldson to the no-nonsense advice of
David Miler, all the pieces share the book’s prevailing
theme, namely, that developing a passion for reading at
an early age is critical to expanding a child’s horizon
and thereby maximizing his or her potential.
A useful guide to encourage at-risk kids, or ones who
just might not yet think of themselves as bookworms, to
become voracious readers and thereby adopt a path aimed
at academic achievement.