This week, the so-called โanti-woke educationโ bill sponsored by state lawmakers in February is winding its way through the General Assembly. The GOP-sponsored legislation, which would prohibit accurately teaching the Black experience in the United States, took shape at the state legislative complex in downtown Raleigh.
Also, this week: Victoria Scott-Miller, a childrenโs book author and owner of nationally recognized pop-up the Liberation Station Bookstore, announced the launch of a fundraising campaign to support the early summer opening of a permanent, brick-and-mortar bookstore for Black children, located at 208 Fayetteville Street in the capital cityโs downtown district.
The bookstore may, in a small way, help to counter aspects of the legislation, as well as book bans that have taken root among conservative educational groups.
Scott-Miller is the author of The Museum Lives In Me, a childrenโs book series that is in every public elementary school across the state. In 2021, she was the youngest and first Black woman to be inducted into the Wake County Public Schools Hall of Fame. She has been running the Liberation Station Bookstore pop-ups since 2019.
Scott-Miller is hoping for a โgrand opening celebration on June 17, during Raleighโs Juneteenth festivities,โ according to a press release on Tuesday. โThe bookstore will join a cluster of Black-owned businesses near Raleighโs historic Black Main Street,โ the release adds.
Among the more than 1,000 book titles that will be housed in the bookstoreโs modest, second-floor space of less than 400 square feet, will be an Advanced Placement African American Studies section. The section โwill feature titles that have been banned from school curriculums or have been recommended by Black AP African American Studies educators throughout the country,โ according to the press release.

Banned books slated to appear on Liberation Stationโs bookshelves include James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On The Mountain, along with Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Beloved. The bookโs four curated sections will also feature space dedicated to pairings of adult titles with childrenโs books to foster intergenerational conversations,โ according to the release. The bookstoreโs two other planned curated sections are โThe Diaspora Wall,โ with literary works that follow the voyage of a โTransatlantic Mapโ while highlighting Sierra Leone, Angola, Brazil, and the West Indies.
Meanwhile, the “America” section will feature โbooks that reflect the vastness of Black childhood from birth to 18 years old.” The store also plans to emphasize books written by Black authors and books published by Black-owned publishers.
Scott-Miller notes in the release that the Black-owned, family-led independent bookstore was inspired when she and Langston, her oldest son, struggled โto find childrenโs books by Black authors or Black illustrators that featured characters of color.โ
That experience prompted Scott-Miller, her husband Duane Miller, son Langston and younger son Emerson to spend $200 to buy 113 books by Black authors and illustratorsโand thus, the Liberation Station was born.
The family has sought to create access to Black literature across educational deserts throughout North Carolinaโan absence that may become all the more distressing with the GOPโs pending legislationโby selling books, at events across the state, that focus on Black knowledge and thought.
The familyโs pop-up bookstore mission has attracted national attention from Good Morning America, The Washington Post, Oprah Magazine, and other national outlets.
Scott-Miller on Tuesday, launched a crowdfunding campaign via The Bulls of Durham, a nonprofit that connects small businesses in the Triangle. She wants to raise $20,000 to support the bookstore’s opening.
โThis is our love letter to the city of Raleigh,โ Scott-Miller wrote in the release, continuing, โItโs time to plant ourselves. When I think about our work, I think about a tree. Weโve done all this work. Weโve had all this reach but itโs been from the top down. We havenโt been able to physically plant ourselves. Now we get to create a unique cultural hub that is a community-centered, community-driven space for self-discovery and the activation of our work.โ
Follow Durham Staff Writer Thomasi McDonald on Twitter or send an email to [email protected]. Comment on this story at [email protected].
Support independent local journalism.
Join the INDY Press Clubย to help us keep fearless watchdog reporting and essential arts and culture coverage viable in the Triangle.



You must be logged in to post a comment.