Taking Our Place in History: The Girls Write Now 2020 Anthology by Girls Write Now


Taking Our Place in History: The Girls Write Now 2020 Anthology
Title : Taking Our Place in History: The Girls Write Now 2020 Anthology
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : -
Publication : Published May 19, 2020

The award-winning annual anthology from New York City’s first and only writing and mentoring organization for girls and gender-expansive teens.

What is it like growing up in New York City as a teen in 2020? This book invites you into their homes and families, their schools and neighborhoods, their hearts, hopes, and fears. Enter a world where clay creatures take on aluminum oppressors. Get thrown against an elevator wall in the midst of a horror story. Go backstage with a rock band, say goodbye to relatives as you start a new life, stand with an engineer solving a coding problem. Experience tragedy in a mosque, feel the wounds of slavery, know the terror of glass shattering in a World War II village, and see how this next generation of leaders looks to the past and writes a better future for us all.

For more than two decades, the nationally award-winning nonprofit Girls Write Now has broken down the barriers of gender, race, age, and poverty, elevating the voices of writers who are too often not heard—or worse, silenced. With mentors by their sides, the girls and gender-nonconforming youth tackle climate change, racism, sexism, rejection, immigration, and friendship—and take their place in history. This book is their testament.

“The written word has often been the only outlet for women and girls to express their authentic stories and unique voices in so many societies across the globe. Girls Write Now harnesses that power, nurtures it, and amplifies it so that these singular voices can become generations.” —Robin Thede, creator, writer, executive producer and star of A Black Lady Sketch Show


Taking Our Place in History: The Girls Write Now 2020 Anthology Reviews


  • Val Riewe

    I was inspired by the written works of art the young women were able to put together, but I was more inspired by the bonds and relationships that were formed between the mentor/mentee.