Rosemary L. Bray’s Unafraid of the Dark is the story of a young Black girl growing up in Chicago during the Civil Rights era. Despite dealing with abuse, poverty and racism, Bray’s mother relies on her resourcefulness, as well as the welfare system, to provide for her family. From Bray’s childhood growing up in public housing in Chicago during the 1960s to her education at Yale, where she became a strong feminist activist during the 1970s, the reader is immersed in worlds that evoke very specific places and eras. Both a powerful confrontation of misconceptions of welfare recipients as well as a story of a woman who overcame all obstacles, Unafraid of the Dark is both powerful and relevant.