Any parent who is striving to spread the full Charlotte Mason feast at their homeschool table will wax poetic on the benefits of using “living books.” As a cornerstone of her educational philosophy, it is truly impossible to provide a Charlotte Mason (CM) education without relying on them. The reasons behind the utilization of living books are so compelling that I would find anyone’s attempts to deny their advantage to be either ill-informed or disingenuous. Yes, I drank the whole pitcher of CM Kool-Aid, and I’m punch drunk.

Because Charlotte Mason didn’t leave behind a static book list of “must reads for a proper CM education,” to define a living book is an exercise in itself. For a more robust exploration, I encourage you to read here on Ambleside Online or listen to this A Delectable Education podcast. But for the sake of this discussion, I will rely on this inadequate and incomplete definition: Living books are those with superior literary quality that offer a beautiful expression of inspirational ideas and worthy thoughts.
For Charlotte Mason followers, books that do not qualify as “living” are most typically referred to as “twaddle.” As with living books, there is no single solid definition of twaddle, but this working definition of twaddle from Simply Charlotte Mason lays out its characteristics as:

  1. Talking down to a child
  2. Diluted
  3. Undervaluing the intelligence of a child
  4. Reading-made-easy
  5. Second-rate, stale, predictable
  6. Goody-goody story books or highly-spiced adventures of poor quality, titillating
  7. Scrappy, weak, light reading

So offer up living books and don’t provide twaddle. Got it. But what about books that fall outside of both camps – those that neither rise to the literary quality and responsibility of a living book nor swim in the gutters of twaddle-land? For some, there is no in-between, but for the bookshelves of a black Charlotte Mason family, there better be.
Despite my unwavering belief in Charlotte Mason’s principles and especially her insistence on living books, I regularly find myself offering up books to my children, without question, that I know are not living.
There is a sickening shortage of living books featuring black characters that are not current/former slaves, fighting for civil rights, or struggling through urban poverty with broken families and even more broken spirits. It is incredibly unhealthy for black children to solely read about the lives of white fictional characters, the trials and contributions of white historic figures, and the struggles and triumphs of slaves, former slaves, and the poor, ignorant, or down-trodden.
There are dangers with feeding black children a white-washed literary feast speckled with morsels of slavery, Jim Crow, and “the struggle.” In this situation, black children may, among other things:

  • Rarely experience the delight of getting “lost” in a book
  • Be left feeling insignificant and one-dimensional as the off-spring of former slaves and nothing more
  • Miss out on the benefits of seeing themselves as players in an engaging plot
  • Begin to feel ignored or invisible
  • Buy into harmful stereotypes in children’s literature
  • Set off in life thinking that black people have never contributed anything worthy of serious study and examination
  • Be unfamiliar with the origins of various forms of art that comprise current African-American culture
  • Begin to identify with white children and adults as the purveyors of correctness (“White is right”)
  • Erroneously believe that all brown people in the world have required “saving” from white people before becoming whole
  • Lack the opportunity to develop their own imaginative characters who reflect their life experiences (because even the illustrations in otherwise race-neutral books remind them that the characters were all intended to be white)

To prevent these ill-effects and more, I argue that there is another category of books worth integrating into the Charlotte Mason-based education of black children: life-giving books.

Life-giving books are those that build a child’s sense of self by providing real and imagined heroes along with commonfolk who look like them and experience the world through the similar lens of a shared culture. These unique works provide additional rungs on which a child may hang their self-perception and worldview. While they may not rise to the unequivocal literary beauty and inspiration of living books, life-giving books cradle a black child’s soul, and it would be shameful to tag and dismiss them as mere twaddle. At times, life-giving books may share some characteristics of living books, twaddle or both, but they stand alone as a necessary adjunct to the carefully fashioned atmosphere of a black Charlotte Mason home. 

As with all forms of art, literary beauty is in the eye of the beholder. What may look like mere gimmicky eye-candy literature to a mom whose child is validated daily through the words and pictures of nearly every living book presented in the feast, could be a life-giving book to my brown babies. The mere existence of dust jackets featuring brown people is a breath of life blown into my household. The mention of a familiar cultural experience or the knowing hum of a grandmother’s song is an acknowledgement that the black experience is really a thing worth noting and loving. And the simplicity and comfort of reading about the real or imagined life of a child or adult with a story to tell who happens to be black vs. a story about being black is a critical element in the development of a creative mind space for black boys and girls.
The utter lack of choice within the book market (and especially among living booksof brown characters is upsetting, but the reasons are structural, nuanced, and can’t be fixed overnight. In the meantime, I’m going to continue our CM journey while catering to the emotional health of my black children. By mixing our shelves with living books AND life-giving books, I seek to ensure that their education is not a legalistic venture in Charlotte Mason but an honest experience that honors the Truth while helping them to see the imago Dei in themselves and others.
***UPDATE: I’ve received many requests in the comments and via email for a list of life-giving books. Please check out my ongoing list of book recommendations here.