Hip Hop Speaks to Children (And Their Parents)

I thought I knew what Hip Hop was, but after picking up the kids' CD-and-book set
Hip Hop Speaks to Children, I have a whole new appreciation for this diverse and often moving art
form of "poetry with a beat."
Edited by
poet, writer and activist Nikki Giovanni, this children's book gave my decidedly white family a glimpse of what it
means to grow up black in America -- not in some dry, textbooky way, but
through incredibly creative poetry and a toe-tapping beat. With fifty poems from the likes of Maya Angelou and Ja Jahanes on colorful, full-page illustrations, my kids were delighted to pore through the pages while I read aloud.
But to really make the poetry come alive, I turned on the companion CD so the kids and I could bop around to Rapper's Delight and strut our stuff to Queen Latifah's "Ladies First". I tear up
every time I hear Oscar Brown Jr.'s "Dat Dere", which sweetly talks
about the swift passage of childhood, and of course we are always moved to hear
Dr. King reciting "I Have a Dream."
No matter how you feel -- or think you feel -- about hip hop or poetry, this is one book that should be a must-have for every home. Don't miss it.
-Christina
Hip Hop Speaks to Children is available on Amazon.
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