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Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Child of the Civil Rights Movement, by Paula Young Shelton, illustrated by Raul Colón -- Day 47



Author Paula Young Shelton was just four at the time of the Selma-to-Montgomery march for civil rights in 1965, but she was at the very heart of events. Her recollections of that time are the foundation of Child of the Civil Rights Movement, a wonderful picture book memoir of the efforts that led to the passage of the Voting Rights Act. The grim reality of Jim Crow laws in the South drew her activist parents, Andrew and Jean Childs Young, from New York City to Atlanta. Their family experienced firsthand the “No blacks allowed here” environment; their home became an important gathering place for Martin Luther King Jr., Ralph Abernathy, Dorothy Cotton and other leaders in the growing movement – the “family of the American civil rights movement” she knew so well. Shelton describes discussions around the dinner table as a symphony of strong feelings and calm reason, with all participants determined to launch a peaceful march that would make a difference. The Youngs marched from Selma as a family – children Andrea and Lisa and little Paula included. Several months later they watched on TV as President Johnson, with Uncle Martin looking on, signed the Voting Rights Act into law, a jubilant occasion. Illustrator Raul Colón’s rich illustrations capture beautifully the sobering substance of this historic moment and the strong and spirited light within its participants. Ages 5 up.


For older readers, Russell Freedman's Because They Marched: The People's Campaign for Voting Rights That Changed America is a riveting documentary look at the powerful struggle for civil rights that look place in Alabama in the 1960s. It chronicles the barriers that faced African Americans who wished to vote, the numerous protests that took place, Bloody Sunday when 600 marchers were attacked by state troopers, the 54-mile Alabama Freedom March and rally later in in the month attended by 25,000 people, and other aspects of this momentous time. Ages 12 up.