Author Alicia Nicole invites readers to explore her collection of transformative work. Her writing not only moves readers but promotes personal development, healing, and self-discovery.

This is not a book asking for permission. It is a witnessing.
Where Do Black Girls Go to Cry is a deeply personal and socially necessary work that explores what it means to carry pain quietly in a world that expects strength without tenderness. Through prose and poetic reflection, the book creates space for grief, truth, rage, love, and release.
This work is for the girl you were. The woman you became. And the healing you are still allowed to claim.

Good Night, I Love You, See You in the Morning is a gentle, affirming bedtime story rooted in love, safety, and emotional reassurance. Written for children and the adults who care for them, it honors the sacred moment at the end of the day when presence matters more than words — and words still matter deeply.
Through warmth, repetition, and tenderness, this story reinforces what every child needs to hear: that they are loved, that they are safe, and that connection does not disappear with sleep.
This book is for:
It is not just a story to be read. It is a ritual. A closing of the day wrapped in love.