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PROTEST! by Alice Haworth-Booth

PROTEST!

How People Have Come Together To Change the World

by Alice Haworth-Booth & Emily Haworth-Booth ; illustrated by Emily Haworth-Booth

Pub Date: Sept. 7th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-84365-512-1
Publisher: Pavilion Children's

Discover the history of the world’s most effective protests.

Arranged in a mostly chronological format, this book documents an international history of protest and resistance. The text is quick to note that it “is not a complete history. It includes a selection of famous and less well-known movements, focusing on nonviolent protest. Rather than describe a handful of protests and their contexts in depth, [they] have chosen to present a broad range to give a sense of the many possibilities of what protest can be.” This summation captures both the strengths and the flaws of the text. The Haworth-Booths provide glimpses into myriad cultures and social groups, including movements not frequently seen in U.S. children’s books such as Chile’s early 1970s protests against food shortages and Nigeria’s Abeokuta Women’s Revolt in the 1940s. Unfortunately, though, they cover so many topics that the information has been condensed until key pieces are missing. This could be a permissible sin if there were thorough, user-friendly backmatter enabling readers to investigate more deeply elsewhere, but the cramped bibliographic essay does not comprehensively provide specific citations or documentation. Some sections are missing vital information, such as whether stories are documented or anecdotal, key facts, and cultural context. The crisp tone is more reminiscent of a textbook than enjoyable nonfiction, and the pink, gray, and black color scheme of the illustrations provides little excitement. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

How can such a passionate topic be rendered so blandly?

(Nonfiction. 8-12)