NEW YORK — The author and educator Kleaver Cruz has
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books & Media announced Monday that Cruz has adapted his “Black Joy Project" into a book of the same name. “Black Joy Project,” which does not yet have a release date, will combine images and essays into what Cruz has called the vital use of joy as a path to resistance.
“There is a necessity in expressing and naming Black joy as a practice towards liberation and I want it for all Black people around the world,” Cruz said in a statement.
The Black Joy Project dates back to 2015 when Cruz felt overwhelmed by “Black death and pain,” as he writes on his
Houghton senior editor Rakia Clark said in a statement that she was excited to "focus on joy as an ever-present but under-acknowledged force in the struggle for social justice and to help shepherd a necessary addition into the current canon of books on race.”
“What I love about The Black Joy Project is that it doesn’t shy away from any activist movements or from difficult conversations; it offers another way to access them. It shows activism as more than suffering,” she said.
Hillel Italie, The Associated Press