
Jun 09, 2025 7 Books to Read This Juneteenth
Curated by Librarian Allyson Mower
Juneteenth commemorates the end of chattel slavery in the United States. It memorializes and celebrates freedom, resilience, Black excellence, and provides a time to reflect on the challenges to liberation still present in American society. These books and readings from Marriott Library’s collection attempt to showcase the rich history of Juneteenth and African American culture. The books will be on display and available for checkout during the U of U’s 2025 Juneteenth celebration on Friday, June 20, 2025 at noon in 1150, Marriott Library. Look for Librarian Allyson Mower if you would like to check out the books and learn more about the other readings mentioned in the list.
The Emancipation Proclamation (facsimile)
Signed by President Abraham Lincoln
Written in 1863, a year before the end of the Civil War, this document conveys President Lincoln’s intention to emancipate African Americans held in bondage and to list the states and counties considered in rebellion to the United States because of that act of bondage. Marriott Library has a facsimile in Rare Books. The National Archives have digitized the original.
2022 Oral Histories of Black Utahns
Conducted by Sema Hadithi African American Heritage & Culture Foundation
Go Back and Get It
By Dionne Ford
A finalist for the Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Foundation Legacy Award, this memoir tells the story of what it takes to discover the history of one’s ancestry as an African American. The photo that Ms. Ford happened up is one of the most iconic photographs I have ever seen – one that draws you in and keeps you there, which the book as a whole also does. A truly masterful work of genealogical and personal discovery.
Juneteenth
By Ralph Ellison
Published posthumously, this evocative book immediately connects you to loveable and humorous characters – a group of elderly African Americans seeking to obtain an unscheduled audience with a U.S. senator – with writing more powerful than film in its ability to establish the scene (arguably even better than “Invisible Man”), and show the precarity with which full freedom and emancipation can exist as epitomized by the booming voice, vision, and entrenchment of the U.S. senator.
Jubilee: Recipes from Two Centuries of African American Cooking
By Toni Tipton-Martin
Author of the award-winning book The Jemima Code wrote this beautiful 2019 cookbook to explore her own family history and document the ethno-botany of West African foodways present in African American culture. The recipes are amazing – hibiscus tea, okra salad, braised lamb shanks, sweet potato bread, lemon meringue pie, and many more – which make this a highly recommended title.
Life Upon These Shores: Looking at African American History, 1513-2008
By Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
For a rich discussion of the Emancipation Proclamation, reach for this seminal history by Dr. Gates. You can easily spend all summertime with this book and come away feeling more fully educated on our shared American history.
Playlist for the Apocalypse
By Rita Dove
Dr. Gates imparts that religious sermons and spirituals were and are often part of Juneteenth celebrations and poetry is most definitely a type of sermon. Of Rita Dove’s newest collection, I recommend “Youth Sunday” and “Declaration of Independence.” Also be sure to check out digitized sermons by Rev. France Davis.
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