African American Women - Biography, Literature - Authors & Writers, Authors - Biography, African American Civil Rights Leaders - Biography, African American Writers - Biography
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Overview
The Journey to Freedom(R) series provides comprehensive information and honest portrayals of key African-American people and events, illuminating achievements and contributions that have shaped the history of our nation and our world.
Examines the life and accomplishments of the African American writer, performer, and teacher, as well as her impact on literature and black culture.
Editorials
School Library Journal
Gr 3-6-Chronological overviews of the lives of well-known African Americans. Although there is little elaboration on the material presented, there are enough details for readers to get a sense of what the protagonists' lives were like. Both titles are attractively formatted with lots of white space, print size that is easy on the eyes, and one or two clear sepia-toned or full-color photographs or reproductions per spread. Boxed captions for each picture add to the information found in the text. There are no bibliographies, yet the book on Angelou lists sources for the quoted material. Accuracy is a concern in the Tubman book. Readers are told that she had 11 brothers and sisters (she was one of 11 children). David Adler's A Picture Book of Harriet Tubman (Holiday, 1992), Dan Elish's Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad (Millbrook, 1993), and Jacob Lawrence's Harriet and the Promised Land (S & S, 1993) are already in many collections. With less written about Angelou for this audience, libraries should consider purchasing that title.-Kathleen Staerkel, Indian Trails Public Library District, Wheeling, IL Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.Book Details
Published
June 9, 2026
Publisher
Child's World, Incorporated, The
Pages
32
Format
Binding
ISBN
9781602531314