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Tuesday, April 25, 2017

The Book Itch: Freedom, Truth & Harlem’s Greatest Bookstore, by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, illustrated by R. Gregory Christie -- Day 96


The Book Itch: Freedom, Truth & Harlem’s Greatest Bookstore, by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, illustrated by R. Gregory Christie, tells the story of a landmark bookstore located for many years near the corner of 125th Street and Seventh Avenue in New York City, just around the corner from the Apollo Theater. To a welcoming community it supplied not only books but a meeting place, a talking place, a cultural home. It was founded and run for over forty years by Lewis Michaux. He started his bookstore as a pushcart; “with five books and a mission…he had something in his heart he believed in” and had to scratch that itch. Readers are invited to take a wonderful informative leap into this literary history through the eyes of Lewis’s son Lewis Jr. From the start, Lewis’s father believed the National Memorial African Bookstore was “The House of Common Sense and Home of Proper Propaganda,” meaning an outstanding collection of books by and about black people. Young Lewis remembers with awe when famous people like Muhammed Ali and Malcolm X came by the bookstore and sometimes spoke on a platform out front. He remembers that anyone could come in off the street and read a book, even if they never ever bought one. Lewis’s father believed that history could be learned by reading books, and people could learn from each other by sharing ideas: “Knowledge is power. You need it every hour. READ A BOOK!” Artist R. Gregory Christie combines expressive paintings with bold aphorisms used by bookseller Michaux, a perfect complement to the story. A more detailed biography of Lewis Henri Michaux is included at the end along with an author’s note and selected bibliography for further reading. This book reminds us in no uncertain terms that bookstores have played a transformative role in community after community across the nation. One need only consider such stores as Politics and Prose Bookstore in Washington, D.C., and City Lights on the other side of the country in San Francisco and be glad that in between, thousands of community bookstores welcome customers every day to experience the power of books and reading. Ages 7-11.


In Sarah Stewart’s The Library, delightfully illustrated by David Small, we see a passion for books expressed in another way. Fictional Elizabeth Brown (based on a real person the author knew) “didn’t like to play with dolls…she didn’t like to skate…she learned to read quite early and at an incredible rate.” Well, Elizabeth always had a book with her and read wherever she was. She gathered so many books they were piled on chairs and spread across the floor; indeed, it became hard to get in the front door. Finally, when Elizabeth faced the fact that she could not add one more book, she marched to town hall and donated her books to establish “Elizabeth Brown Free Library.” Thereafter, she walked to the library to borrow books! Ages 5-9.