When her son was 6 months old, Tamara McNeil started looking for children's books that would feed his growing curiosity. While shopping at big retailers, however, she couldn't find books that prominently featured black characters.
"There weren't a lot of books that were reflective of him," McNeil tells Mashablein a phone interview, as her now 19-month-old son babbles in the background. "There were awesome stories, but just no characters in those books who looked like him."
McNeil tried to think of solutions -- ways to make it easier to find books her son and other black children could relate to. She came up with the Just Like Me! Box, a subscription service that delivers two or three carefully selected books to a child's door each month. Educational activities, like vocabulary-based word searches, complement the reading. The children get to keep the books and activities for their growing libraries.
SEE ALSO:7 inspiring children's books to motivate your young activistThe $25-per-month service, which is split into three age groups, is designed to bring positive depictions of black characters to children up to age 12 -- a demographic that is drastically underserved by children's literature.
Of the 3,400 children’s books published in 2015, surveys estimate that only 270 featured black protagonists. While many children's books feature animal main characters, there's still a serious lack of representation -- and that means black children are often left reading about the lives, adventures and experiences of people who don't look like them.
The Just Like Me! Box is the ideal model to help, McNeil says. With a subscription service, parents can guarantee their children are regularly getting the representation and stories they need. Books from the service include NaturallyMe!, a rhyming story on celebrating your appearance, and A StormCalledKatrina, a book about a young black boy dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
View this post on Instagram
The service has accumulated nearly 1,000 subscribers since it officially launched in May 2016. McNeil says this positive reaction has validated that she's not the only parent looking to increase representation on their children's bookshelves.
"I am just a parent who just saw a need in the community and wanted to fill it."
McNeil personally vets each selection included in a Just Like Me! Box, reading every book to her own son to ensure they celebrate blackness, and instill a sense of joy and pride in black heritage and culture.
Ultimately, she hopes it inspires a passion for reading, too.
"A lifelong love of reading -- that's what I hope the children get out of it," McNeil says. "A habit that turns into a love."
McNeil does say the $25-per-month subscription can be a luxury that low-income families may not be able to afford. To help fill that gap and offer more literary diversity to all children, Just Like Me! also accepts donations to help distribute boxes to shelters, nonprofits and libraries.
View this post on Instagram
Above all, McNeil says she wants parents to know she is just like them -- just a mom who wanted her child to see himself in the books he reads.
"I am just a parent who just saw a need in the community and wanted to fill it," she says.
The boxes are currently sold out, but new Just Like Me! subscriptions will be available on Jan. 5. To be notified when the boxes are restocked, you can sign up for email notifications on the Just Like Me! website.
TopicsActivismBooksSocial GoodRacial Justice
(责任编辑:探索)
Singapore rolls out video
Biden/Harris amps up Animal Crossing campaigning with new virtual swag
What Facebook will look like in 2025
8 ideas for a fun Labor Day weekend indoors
This chart shows just how high Simone Biles can jump
One of the first Apple computers ever made is currently up for auction.A rare "Celebration" Apple-1
...[详细]Epic Games says Apple is threatening its access to developer tools
Epic Games wants you to know that Apple isn't playing nice. The gaming giant behind Fortnitecried fo
...[详细]Singles don't want to date non
If I'm perusing a dating app and someone mentions being apolitical, or not caring about politics, I
...[详细]Women have been waiting for this Election Day for the last four years
For the last four years, millions of women have lived in a perpetual state of rage. In November 2016
...[详细]Plane makes emergency landing after engine rips apart during flight
A Southwest Airlines flight bound for Orlando, Florida, made an emergency landing Saturday morning d
...[详细]Mariah Carey reveals hidden vocals on '90s alt
Mariah Carey worked on an alternative album during the 1990s while creating her own hit album Daydre
...[详细]Olivia Wilde will direct a Sony Marvel movie, possibly featuring spiders
It looks like Sony's web of spider-heroes just caught an incredibly juicy fly. Deadline reports that
...[详细]LG's OLED wall goes virtual, along with other IFA goodies
This year's IFA trade show in Berlin, scheduled to start on Sept. 3, is mostly virtual, despite the
...[详细]The five guys who climbed Australia's highest mountain, in swimwear
Climbing a freezing cold mountain is already hard enough work. But in briefs? Nope. 。It's too late fo
...[详细]What is invisible labor? It's real and it hurts. Here's what to know.
Let's say it's a Monday afternoon. There's a litany of chores that someonein your household will hav
...[详细]Hiddleswift finally followed each other on Instagram after 3 excruciating days

Shazam is coming to iPhone's control panel soon
