
Alicia Nicole Norman is a poet, author, and cultural architect. Her work lives at the intersection of truth, healing, and becoming — exploring womanhood, motherhood, identity, grief, resilience, and the quiet victories that rarely get named.
Her memoir, Where Do Black Girls Go To Cry? (Author’s Cut, Second Edition), tells the story of a parking lot, a psychiatric ward, and a woman who almost didn’t make it — and the son who told her she was strong enough. It is a witnessing, written for the girl you were and the woman you became.
Her bedtime series, Good Night, I Love You. See You in the Morning., affirms identity, love, and royal imagination for children and the adults who tuck them in.
She writes for the women who have been strong for too long, and speaks for the girls who were never given language for their pain — so that healing doesn’t stay private, but becomes communal.