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FLYING FREE by Karyn Parsons

FLYING FREE

How Bessie Coleman's Dreams Took Flight

From the Sweet Blackberry series

by Karyn Parsons ; illustrated by R. Gregory Christie

Pub Date: Dec. 1st, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-316-45719-4
Publisher: Little, Brown

A story in verse of trailblazer Bessie Coleman, the first African American woman to earn a pilot’s license.

After learning about Harriet Quimby, a White woman who became the first American woman to earn a pilot’s license, young Coleman began to think that flying could be for her. A few years later, after moving to Chicago, she learned from her brother that women in France were pilots during “the war” (that this was World War I is never communicated). Inspired, Coleman tried in vain to find a teacher in the United States; undaunted, she moved to France, where she finally learned to fly before returning to the United States to inspire the nation. Coleman is a fascinating subject, but missing biographical detail and undocumented conversations do not suit this effort for the nonfiction shelves. Though the backmatter includes information about women in flight as well as notes from the author and illustrator, there is not enough information presented about Coleman’s life to answer the questions readers will have after finishing this book. Parsons’ verse is, sadly, too often simplistic and strained: “One day, Bessie’s teacher / Told them of how / A woman had become a pilot! / A huge breakthrough! Wow!” Christie’s characteristically powerful illustrations cannot mitigate the text’s weaknesses (though his note does inform those who read it that Coleman grew up in Texas, another fact Parsons leaves unsaid).

Doesn’t take flight.

(timeline, photographs) (Picture book. 4-7)