Young Adult Books About Black Girls who are passionate About Ballet

Dance is an essential form of artistic expression and strength. These books focus on young Black girls who are passionate, dedicated, and invested in ballet & dance.

18710209.jpg

Tiny Pretty Things

Authors: Dhonielle Clayton & Sona Charaipotra

Description: Tiny Pretty Things is a contemporary young adult novel set in a prestigious ballet school in New York City. It follows three ballet dancers who are competitive and ruthless in their goals of becoming the best prima ballerina. One dancer is the only Black ballet dancer at their school, another is white, and the final is biracial Korean American.

Includes: #Black #eastasian #korean #biracial #multipleperspectives #femaleprotagonist #ballet

Citation: Clayton, D. & Charaipotra, S. (2015). Tiny Pretty Things. HarperCollins.

Image retrieved from: Goodreads.

 
26198216._SX318_.jpg

Shiny Broken Pieces

Authors: Dhonielle Clayton & Sona Charaipotra

Description: Shiny Broken Pieces is a contemporary young adult novel set in a prestigious ballet school. It is the sequel to Tiny Pretty Things. It follows three ballet dancers as they compete for a spot within the American Ballet Company. One dancer is the only Black ballet dancer, another is white, and the final is biracial Korean American.

Includes: #Black #eastasian #korean #biracial #multipleperspectives #femaleprotagonist #ballet

Citation: Clayton, D. & Charaipotra, S. (2016). Shiny broken pieces. HarperCollins.

Image retrieved from: Goodreads.

 
28354933.jpg

Pointe

Author: Brandy Colbert

Description: Pointe is a contemporary young adult mystery novel. It follows a Black female ballet dancer who is recovering from disordered eating and her friend who returns from being kidnapped. When her best friend returns safely from being kidnapped for 4 years, he starts having post traumatic stress (PTSD) related to his abductor. This book deals with kidnapping, eating disorders, rape, drugs, ballet, and friendships.

Includes: #Black #africanamerican #femaleprotagonist #ballet #mentalhealth #PTSD

Citation: Colbert, B. (2014). Pointe. Penguin.

Image retrieved from: Goodreads.

 
40864798.jpg

I Wanna Be Where You Are

Author: Kristina Forest

Description: I Wanna Be Where You Are is a contemporary love story. It follows a female protagonist who is set on attending the dance conservatory of her dreams. Her mom, on the other hand, forbids her from applying. She devises a plan to road trip two hundred miles to the nearest audition. Her annoying neighbor and his dog tag along.

Includes: #africanamerican #black #contemporary #ballet #femaleprotagonist

Citation: Forest, K. (2019). I wanna be where you are. Roaring Book Press.

Image retrieved from: Goodreads.

 
1455928._SY475_.jpg

Dancer

Author: Lorri Hewett

Description: Dancer is a contemporary love story (written in the late 1990s). It follows a Black female protagonist who is deeply dedicated to her study fo ballet. Her parents are both working class and her father is the custodian at her elite private school where she attends on scholarship. She is the only Black student in her ballet school until a boy joins her classes and begins to dance with her despite his real loves being hip hop dance and break dancing. His aunt was a Black ballet dancer in the 1950s and offers to help teach her how to improve her dancing so that she will be competitive during her auditions into some of the larger dance conservatories in NYC, Seattle, and San Francisco.

Includes: #africanamerican #black #contemporary #ballet #femaleprotagonist

Citation: Hewett, L. (1999). Dancer. Puffin Books.

Image retrieved from: Goodreads.

 
375916.jpg

Another Way To Dance

Author: Martha Southgate

Description: Another Way To Dance is a contemporary love story (written in the late 1990s). It follows a 14 year old Black female protagonist who joins a summer program with the NYC School of American Ballet. Though she thinks that she is ready to dance her heart out and learn and grow in the summer program, she is not prepared to be one of only two Black dancers within her cohort, nor is she prepared to deal with the racism she encounters at the school.

Includes: #africanamerican #black #contemporary #ballet #femaleprotagonist

Citation: Southgate, M. (1998). Another Way To Dance. Laurel Leaf.

Image retrieved from: Goodreads.