Rachel Lincoln Sarnoff
My children devoured the American Girl Historical Characters books, which explore critical moments in U.S. history from the 1700s through the 20th century. Published by Mattel, protagonists are physically represented by dolls with historically accurate clothing, accessories, furniture, and even pets. Since 1986, kids have been obsessed with them. In my family, dolls were passed down from cousin to sibling to friend, but the rule was you had to read the entire six-book set before even considering putting a doll on your birthday list.
My youngest daughter’s favorite was Kaya, a Native American girl living in 1764 who investigates colonialism and cultural erasure as her Nez Perce tribe is threatened by settlers. My middle daughter loved Josefina, who grapples with a caste system that indigenous and mixed-heritage people in 1824 New Mexico dealt with. The three of us spent many nights huddled up in my bed, reading the books together.
These stories reveal the systemic injustices that have existed since America’s inception—a truth that is now part of the so-called “woke ideology” that the current administration is trying to erase. According to PEN America, a nonprofit that has been fighting to protect freedom of expression since 1922, reports that in the last school year, nearly 7,000 books were banned in 87 districts across 23 states; since 2021, PEN America has recorded nearly 23,000 book bans, typically targeting those that discuss sexual and gender identity, race and racism, and social justice.


Many novelists reach a moment when their manuscript feels like a marathon without a finish line. The middle sags. The characters stall. Or life interrupts and the once-exciting story now feels like a long, uphill climb.
Turn your book into a movie.
Learning how you write a book is like finding your way in a pitch black room full of furniture. You can learn by barking your shins, but there are less painful ways.
Back in the days of dial-up Internet, and long before the rise of social media, there was blogging. For writers especially, blogging gave us an outlet, an opportunity to sharpen our skills, to tell stories, and to hone our voices. We wrote about whatever meant something to us. And we blogged to connect with readers and each other long before the world became overconnected.