The first book McBride remembers reading is Mama, Would You Love Me by Barbara M. Jose. McBride says she comes from a family of storytellers, which she credits her love for writing to, as she says that oral storytelling is a big part of her experience of African American culture. She wrote her first book in fifth grade.[1]
McBride was a pre-med student until her junior year of university but transitioned to creative writing after a car accident and subsequent stay in the hospital caused her to realize she didn't enjoy hospitals enough to become a doctor.[2] McBride has a Bachelor of Arts in English from James Madison University and a Master of Fine Arts in poetry from Emerson College.[3] As of 2023, she is an assistant professor of Poetry and English at the University of Virginia.[1][4][5]
She credits working with students as one of her inspirations for wanting to write novels for young adults.[6]
McBride's debut novel-in-verse, Me (Moth), was published in 2022 by Feiwel and Friends.[8] It is about a Julliard-bound dancer who gets into a car accident that changes the trajectory of her life, having her look to Hoodoo guided by her Rootworker grandfather to ease her pain and taking a trip across the United States and to the Navajo nation.[9] The idea of writing a novel incorporating Hoodoo came to her after her grandfather passed away in 2019.[3] McBride says Hoodoo and magic are often involved in her work, since she considers them to be a significant part of her lived experience.[6] The Native American elements were inspired by her Navajo aunt and a roadtrip to the reservation, which introduced her to customs she wasn't familiar with previously.[3]
McBride's second young adult novel in verse, We are all so Good at Smiling, about clinical depression and healing from trauma, was published in January 2022.[1] The novel was inspired by the author's experience with depression during the COVID-19 pandemic, prompted by her author friend Ally Malinenko's own novel about her lived experience with cancer, which she called inspired by her impression that "no one ever writes about the kids who live. The sentiment resonated with McBride.[1]
McBride says one of the goals of her novel was to make it clear that "not even Baba Yaga or Anansi the spider is [sic] immune to depression", hoping that her novel facilitates open dialogue about mental health struggles.[6]
Gone Wolf
McBride's middle grade debut, Gone Wolf, is a dual-timeline story centering two Black girls, one living in the year 2111 and escaping a dystopian U.S, and one living in Charlottesville during the COVID-19 pandemic, dealing with generational trauma through figments of her imagination.[2] It was published by Feiwel and Friends.[13] It was a finalist for the Heavy Medal Mock Newbery by School Library Journal in January 2024.[14]