March: Book one by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin and [illustrated by] Nate Powell
Marietta, GA : Top Shelf Productions, [2013]
121 p. : chiefly ill. ; 24 cm.
I had not planned on reading March just yet, but then current events caught up with history in the strangest of ways, and I knew I had to read it.
March - a graphic novel - recounts the autobiography of the early years of civil rights icon and US Congressperson, John Lewis. We see his boyhood years in Alabama in the 1950s and his growing awareness of the racist injustices that he wants to change. By the end of this first book in the series (click links for more about book 2 and book 3), he is a key activist in the Civil Rights movement in Tennessee, has led lunch counter protests, desegregation marches, and met Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Turns out the Lewis' role in history is not over yet. With the recent election of Donald Trump and his twitter attacks on John Lewis, the Lewis story and the struggle for racial justice are front and center once again. The controversy has not hurt sales of the March. Right after Trump's attacks on Lewis, sales of his book skyrocketed on Amazon. Along with the many prizes that the books in the March series have won (including a National Book Award) the future of this book, at least, looks bright.
Showing posts with label 1950s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950s. Show all posts
Friday, January 27, 2017
Saturday, August 6, 2016
Amazing Amazing
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
New York : Picador, c2000.
639 p. ; 21 cm.
Michael Chabon's novel won a 2001 Pulitzer Prize and I challenge a reader to not enjoy this wonderful tale. It's a gloriously written tale of the starting in the late 1930s and continuing into the 1950s and centers on the golden age of comic books in New York City, but also embraces the Holocaust, Harry Houdini, The Golem of Prague, Brooklyn, gay life, and of course love, friendship and family.
Though we have this book in the UHS library collection, I read it on my cell phone - accessing it through our library's eBook collection. It's not the first book that I've read on my phone, but it was great to be able to carry it around in my pocket while traveling during the summer.
Fortunately, The Amazing Adventures seems to be doing quite well. I looked for a copy at my local public libraries and all 6 copies were checked out. It's a great book and I will definitely recommend it to any student looking for a rewarding literary fiction read from a contemporary author - especially a reader who has an interest in world of comic book writing and publishing back when vast majorities of young Americans regularly read comic books.
New York : Picador, c2000.
639 p. ; 21 cm.
Michael Chabon's novel won a 2001 Pulitzer Prize and I challenge a reader to not enjoy this wonderful tale. It's a gloriously written tale of the starting in the late 1930s and continuing into the 1950s and centers on the golden age of comic books in New York City, but also embraces the Holocaust, Harry Houdini, The Golem of Prague, Brooklyn, gay life, and of course love, friendship and family.
Though we have this book in the UHS library collection, I read it on my cell phone - accessing it through our library's eBook collection. It's not the first book that I've read on my phone, but it was great to be able to carry it around in my pocket while traveling during the summer.
Fortunately, The Amazing Adventures seems to be doing quite well. I looked for a copy at my local public libraries and all 6 copies were checked out. It's a great book and I will definitely recommend it to any student looking for a rewarding literary fiction read from a contemporary author - especially a reader who has an interest in world of comic book writing and publishing back when vast majorities of young Americans regularly read comic books.
Friday, August 28, 2015
Bleak and Beautiful
The Thief and the Dogs by Naguib Mahfouz
New York : Anchor Books, 2008, c1984
158 p. ; 21 cm.
Mahfouz won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1988, and this little gem of a novel gives an example of why.
It is the tale of a man emerging from four years of harsh and humiliating imprisonment, only to find that his wife and her new lover are the ones who betrayed him to the police, and that his criminal mentor is a hypocrite and a man of means and power. Bent on revenge, Said Mahran ends up destroying the only treasure he has left, his humanity.
In it's short, but intense meditation on the human spirit, this novel reminds me of another Nobel laureates fine little novel, Hemingway's Old Man and the Sea.
I really appreciated this novel of set in 1950s Egypt. It is straightforward, compelling, and easy to finish, but leaves you with a lot to sit back and think about.
New York : Anchor Books, 2008, c1984
158 p. ; 21 cm.
Mahfouz won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1988, and this little gem of a novel gives an example of why.
It is the tale of a man emerging from four years of harsh and humiliating imprisonment, only to find that his wife and her new lover are the ones who betrayed him to the police, and that his criminal mentor is a hypocrite and a man of means and power. Bent on revenge, Said Mahran ends up destroying the only treasure he has left, his humanity.
In it's short, but intense meditation on the human spirit, this novel reminds me of another Nobel laureates fine little novel, Hemingway's Old Man and the Sea.
I really appreciated this novel of set in 1950s Egypt. It is straightforward, compelling, and easy to finish, but leaves you with a lot to sit back and think about.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)