October 9, 2025
How One Author Wrote a Children’s Book in Honor of Toni Morrison



Toni Morrison was a giant in the literary world, both in her work as an author of Pulitzer Prize-winning tales and as a Random House editor bringing Black voices into publishing.

To childrenโ€™s book author Andrea Davis Pinkney, Morrison was also a โ€œmentor, a guide, and a sister friend,โ€ she recalls in an interview with TODAY.com.

Now, Pinkney is honoring Morrisonโ€™s legacy with an illustrated childrenโ€™s book about late novelist. โ€œAnd She Was Loved,โ€ which takes its title from a line in Morrisonโ€™s โ€œSong of Solomon,โ€ was published Jan. 7.

โ€œI want to pay the highest tribute to someone who meant so much to me, personally and professionally, who meant so much to so many other authors and emerging talent, and still does today,โ€ Pinkney says, describing the book as a โ€œpraise poem, a love letter, a thank you and an invitation.โ€

Itโ€™s a full-circle moment for Pinkney, given how her relationship with Morrison began. The two collaborated on Morrisonโ€™s books for children starting in 1991, where Pinkney had the formidable task of editing a literary icon.

โ€œHaving grown up reading Toni Morrison as a child, being in a home where her books were everywhere, and then now working with her to create books for the next generation of readers โ€” you can imagine how powerful and meaningful that was,โ€ Pinkney says.

Pinkney was โ€œcompletely awestruckโ€ the first time she met Morrison, greeting her at the entrance of the publishing house and bringing her into the office. Morrison had a โ€œregal presence,โ€ Pinkney recalls.

Unsure of what to say to her literary hero, Pinkney โ€œbabbledโ€ and tried to bond with Morrison through her daughterโ€™s name, Chloe โ€” as Morrison was born Chloe Anthony Wofford Morrison.

She was similarly nervous about actually editing Morrison’s work. โ€œYou canโ€™t imagine what a tall order it is to edit the work of Toni Morrison. I would have a quivering pencil,โ€ she says.

But the nerves and quivers subsided, Pinkney says, as the two women began their โ€œwholly collaborativeโ€ relationship. โ€œThat had to go away so we could make some great books,โ€ she says.

Morrisonโ€™s approach to childrenโ€™s literature was similar to her works for adults, like โ€œBelovedโ€ and โ€œThe Bluest Eye,โ€ Pinkney says.

โ€œToni Morrison was just a master storyteller and she was very committed to inviting young people into narratives. She wanted to reach out a hand and invite them in,โ€ she says.

Pinkney says Morrison would handwrite her childrenโ€™s books, as she did her adult books. Periodically, Pinkney would receive installments via fax machine.

โ€œWeโ€™re here to embrace you and show you that you have worth. You have agency. You have dignity โ€” youโ€™re never alone, because here we are.โ€

What Andrea Davis Pinkney says books told her as a child

โ€œShe had a very curly, artistic, calligraphic handwriting, She would then call me and say, โ€˜Andrea, go to the fax machine.โ€™ Out of the fax would come this waxy paper with her handwriting on it. Weโ€™d line them up and like a beautiful mosaic, that is how the narratives for young people came together,โ€ she says.

Their connection goes deeper than their working relationship. In Morrison, Pinkney found someone whose story arc echoed her own.

Growing up, both women were integrated into their elementary schools and were the only Black students in their first grade classrooms. Pinkney describes the feeling of being the only Black student in first grade as โ€œanxious apartness,โ€ or the feeling that โ€œyou are completely alone in the world.โ€

During this time, Pinkney found solace in books and stories. โ€œThey said, โ€˜Come. You belong here,โ€™โ€ she says. โ€œWe’re here to embrace you and show you that you have worth. You have agency. You have dignity โ€” you’re never alone, because here we are.โ€

After working in publishing, Pinkney, like Morrison, became an author. She learned from Morrison to wake up early (very early โ€” think 4 a.m.) to better convene with the โ€œmuse.โ€

She specializes in children’s books, linking pivotal moments in history with beautiful illustration โ€” often from her husband, award-winning illustratorย Brian Pinkney (though “And She Was Loved” was illustrated by Daniel Minter).

Minter’s artwork is a โ€œvisual odeโ€ to Morrison โ€” and the covers tell a deliberate story about Morrison’s philosophy.

โ€œToni Morrison was committed to representing, rendering and celebrating Blackness,โ€ Pinkney says. โ€œ(On the cover), she’s looking right at us. When you peel off the case cover, there she is again. We, as a people, must always be front and center. We must show our faces. We must show up. We must look at you.โ€

With her book, Pinkney hopes to capture what Morrison provided for her readers and what books meant to Pinkney as a girl. โ€œThe title means everything to me. Toni Morrison left all of us that feeling of love,โ€ she says.

It’s fitting that Pinkney’s last conversation with Morrison before her death in 2019 was about the importance of books for children.

โ€œShe said something about the importance of giving young people enjoyment โ€” lifting them up through the enjoyment of a story,โ€ she says.

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