W. Kamau Bell in January 2023, Park City, Utah.Photo:Suzi Pratt/Getty

W. Kamau Bell attends the Lunar New Year Dinner presented by Sunrise Collective at Sundance Film Festival 2023

Suzi Pratt/Getty

According to DonorsChoose board memberW. Kamau Bell, the program will help parents like him and his wife.“I know that my three Black daughters, mixed-race Black daughters, respond to books that reflect their lives and with characters that look like them or have similar life experiences,” he says. “And so if my daughters are doing it, more kids should have access to this because not every kid has the access to a great dad like me.”

ColorPop Books Project

ColorPop Books

“I was a big reader,” Bell says. “My mom said I was reading the back of cereal boxes, I was that kid.” But he struggled to find Black characters in the books he saw. Instead, he says, “I had to sort of make characters Black in my mind. So for example,Spider-Manwas…well before Spider-Man was actually Black in the comic books, Spider-Man was Black to me. He was just like, Peter Parker felt like he was Black to me. Weirdly, the main character fromThe Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caulfield, was Black to me just because…that’s how I read the book now.”

Still, he adds, it really helps when kids can see someone who looks like them in the pages of a book.“If you hand my kids a book and it’s a little White boy on the cover, they’re not going to respond to it right away," Bell says. “They’re not going to try to make that character fit them. They’re going to be like, ‘no, let me find the book with a little Black girl on the cover.'”

A child reads a book.Getty

ColorPop Books Project

Getty

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.And although Bell says he’s “terminally online,” researching potential books to offer his daughters, he knows that not all parents have that kind of time.“So I think that’s why ColorPop is great because it’s like, we’ve done the legwork for you,” he adds.

Beyond just getting these books in front of children who need and want them, Bell says, it’s important to signal to the publishing industry that diverse books can sell.“You need publishers to see them sell and to see that, which is why you’re seeing more of these books,” he says. “I think it’s great that when my daughter goes to a great good place for books here in the Bay Area, and this is not a Black bookstore, it’s just a neighborhood bookstore, there are several books that have the cover faced out that feature characters who look like her and several books with characters with covers out that don’t feature characters like her. So clearly there has been evidence in the publishing industry that these books sell.”

As for the experience parents and children can have when using ColorPop, Bell adds, “I’m hoping that it becomes known as an easy one-stop shop. Again, not every parent has the time or interest or ability to do the kind of searches that I do. And I hope this becomes easily accessible for parents who want to find these kinds of books.”

source: people.com