March: Book Three
Lewis, J., Aydin, A., Powell, N. (2016). March: Book
three. GA: Top Shelf Productions.
An important graphic novel that talks about the civil rights
activism as told by participant John Lewis. Sometimes the graphics contained
too much to fully process but like They Called Us Enemy by George Takei, it
ultimately makes the information more accessible, especially to middle grade students.
John Lewis tells about events and protests during the 1960s. This final
installment of 3 opens with the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham,
AL in 1963. It closes with the President Lyndon B. Johnson signing the 1965
Voting Rights Act into law. Along the way we learn about his experience with
local and national protests. He describes interactions with prominent leaders during
the era such as Malcom X and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. I would have liked to
have had some sort of glossary to remember what the various acronyms stood for
as they were a bit overwhelming and there were many I was not familiar with, I
can only imagine what it would be like for a YA reader with less prior
knowledge about the Civil Rights Movement.
More from John Lewis: March: Book One and March:
Book Two
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