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The Next Chapter

3 Black Canadian writers to watch in 2024

To honour Black History Month, The Next Chapter contributor Ryan B. Patrick curated a list of Black Canadian writers to watch and read.

Ryan B. Patrick shares CBC Books' Black Canadian writers to watch list with Ali Hassan

To the left, a woman with an afro, in the middle, a woman with glasses, to the right, a man with a black t-shirt.
Britta Badour wrote Wires That Sputter, Sarah Everett wrote The Probability of Everything and Matthew R. Morris wrote Black Boys Like Me. (Gilad Cohen, Cassandra Williams, Anthony Gebrehiwot)
Every year, CBC Books producer and contributor Ryan B. Patrick composes a Black Canadian writers to watch list, made up of talented authors on the rise. This year's list includes Britta Badour (Wires That Sputter), Sarah Everett (The Probability of Everything), and Matthew R. Morris (Black Boys Like Me).

To honourBlack History Month, The Next Chapter contributor Ryan B. Patrick curated a list of Black Canadian writers to watch and read.

He spoke with The Next Chapter's Ali Hassan about the three authors he wants to pay attention to in 2024.

Britta Badour

A magenta book cover that features the book's title
Wires That Sputter is a poetry collection by Britta Badour. (Penguin Random House Canada, Gilad Cohen)

Britta Badour, better known as Britta B., is a spoken word artist and author based in Toronto. She is the recipient of the 2021 Breakthrough Artist Award from the Toronto Arts Foundation and 2021 Writer of The Year from the Canadian Organization of Campus Activities. She teaches spoken word performance at Seneca College.

"Wires That Sputter connects who she is in terms of what she looks like and what she does to the world that she lives in.

"If you've seen her spoken word poetry it's electric, it's vibes, it's powerful. The book captures that live performance, that musicality, that lyrical feel on the page with such a poetic power," said Patrick.

Badour's debut poetry collection, Wires That Sputter, explores pop culture, sports, family dynamics and Black liberation. She discusses her lived experience as a Black mixed-race woman who grew up in Kingston, Ont.

"When I think about what it means to be free, what it means to have liberation and be Black, it is evolving with this knowledge of history in mind and hopefully getting to a space where our Blackness is able to care for itself more," Badour told The Next Chapter in 2023.

LISTEN | Britta Badour discusses her poetry collection:
Canadian poet and award-winning spoken word performer Britta Badour, aka Britta B, shares the inspirations behind her debut poetry collection, Wires that Sputter.

Sarah Everett

A Black woman with curly hair and glasses looks at the camera. A book cover of a girl in a dress standing in the rain.
The Probability of Everything is a novel by Sarah Everett. (Cassandra Williams, HarperCollins)

Currently based in Alberta, Sarah Everett is theauthor of several books for teens. The Probability of Everything won the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for young people's literature text. Her YA and middle grade books include Some Other Now, How to Live Without You and No One Here is Lonely.

The Probability of Everythingfollows Kemi Carter, a 11-year-old girl who dreams of being a scientist. With her love for probability, she calculates that an asteroid has a high probability of hitting the Earth in four days. Over the four days, she feels like the world is ending as she navigates moving into a new neighbourhood and her relationships with her family members.

"You have this ticking time bomb, this asteroid hurtling towards Earth. But it's really about the genre conventions of the middle-grade novel in terms of exploring race, exploring identity and exploring what it means to be in a family," Patrick said.

Matthew R. Morris

Black Boys Like Me by Matthew R. Morris. Illustrated book cover of a vinyl record. A man with a black t-shit looks into the camera.
Black Boys Like Me is a book by Matthew R. Morris. (Viking, Anthony Gebrehiwot)

Matthew R. Morris is a writer, advocate and educator based in Toronto. As a public speaker, he has travelled across North America to educate on anti-racism in the education system. Black Boys Like Meis his first book. Morris was recently announced as one of the readers for the 2024 CBC Nonfiction Prize.

Black Boys Like Me is a collection of eight essays that examine his own experiences with race and identity throughout his childhood into his current work as an educator. The child of a Black immigrant father and a white mother, Morris was influenced by the prominent Black male figures he saw in sports, TV shows and music while growing up in Scarborough, Ont. While striving for academic success, he confronted Black stereotypes and explored hip hop culture in the 1990s.

"I think that's a topic that hasn't been explored to any depth in a nonfiction context. It's about the school system which has historically held back Black people. He explores that as eight illuminating essays that are constructed like a mixtape and he grapples with these questions in terms of identity and perception.

"He was a football star in high school. He explores what it means to be a Black boy into sports, pop culture, education, and it looks at how Black men consume this content and are often consumed by it. It's a very rich text. It asks very timely questions about what it means to be Black in today's world," added Patrick.

In an interview with The Next Chapter last month, Morris spoke about not feeding into the gatekeeping that he sees with literature around Blackness, where some people assert a full understanding of the Black experience.

"It's very hard to claim an expertise in understanding what it means to exist as a Black man. So for me, I'm merely speaking, not from the inside looking out or from the outside looking in I'm taking my position in the dead centre and just looking around," Morris said.

LISTEN | Matthew Morris discusses the expectations placed on young Black men:
The writer and educator discusses his new nonfiction book, Black Boy Like Me, which explores public education, pop culture and his identity as a young Black man with an immigrant father and a white mother.

Ryan B. Patrick's comments have been edited for length and clarity.

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