Bright Futures Ahead for Native Youth Lit

Event date:
Sunday, May 31
Event time:
2:00pm-3:00pm
Location:
Brower Center, Goldman Theater
Audiences:
Sponsors:
Booksales:
Pegasus Books, in the lobby of the venue
Access:
FREE

Providing stellar examples of excellence in youth literature, the acclaimed authors of this panel pave the way for Native youth readers to see their own cultures reflected in stories that are written by authors with similar backgrounds. In her picture book I Love Salmon and Lampreys, Brook M. Thompson draws from her experiences growing up in the Yurok and Karuk Tribes to tell an inspiring story about a river, a successful Native-led movement for environmental justice, and the making of a scientist. Ojibwe and Lakota author Byron Graves’ young adult novel Medicine Wheels tells the unforgettable story of a gifted young Ojibwe learning to ride in his father’s footsteps while practicing for a skateboarding championship. Printz Award-winning Legendary Fry Bread Drive-In, edited by Cynthia Leitich-Smith, features the voices of both new and acclaimed Indigenous writers in a collection of interconnected stories about laughter, love, Native pride, and the world’s best frybread. The future of youth literature is brightly paved by the remarkable authors of this panel moderated by TBD, and there is no doubt that they will continue to enhance and expand the worldviews of young readers.

Dan Alter

Dan Alter’s poems, reviews and translations have been published in journals including Field, Fourteen Hills, and Zyzzyva; his first collection My Little Book of Exiles won the 2022 Cowan Poetry Prize. A volume of translations Take a Breath, You’re Getting Excited, from the Hebrew of Yakir Ben-Moshe, was published by Ben Yehuda Press in September 2024, and Hills Full of Holes, a second collection of poems, by Fernwood Press in March 2025. He lives with his wife and daughter in Berkeley. He works at the Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life at UC Berkeley.

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