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UNSTOPPABLE JOHN by Pat Zietlow Miller

UNSTOPPABLE JOHN

How John Lewis Got His Library Card—And Helped Change History

by Pat Zietlow Miller ; illustrated by Jerry Jordan

Pub Date: Jan. 7th, 2025
ISBN: 9780593524909
Publisher: Viking

A young reader grows to be a fearless activist and change-making politician.

As a child in Alabama, John Lewis wasn’t permitted to have a library card: “Most libraries were for white people. And he was Black.” Recognizing injustice, he wrote the library a letter, which went unanswered. That didn’t stop John from spending the rest of his life fighting for racial equity. Years later, John and his friends sat at lunch counters and in bus seats reserved for white customers and stood in the sun for hours in voter registration lines. Again and again, they were denied access. Even when faced with anger and violence, they marched for their rights until the laws began to slowly change. John never stopped reading, learning, and fighting, long after he had finally received his library card. Framed by its subject’s love of books and libraries, this biography celebrates Lewis’ determination and situates him within the Civil Rights Movement in language accessible to the picture-book set. Detailed backmatter (including an author’s note) touches on the March on Washington and Bloody Sunday, adding necessary historical depth for older readers, caregivers, and teachers. Rough-edged oil paintings lend a folk-art feel to the story and bring certain striking details into focus, such as the purposeful expressions of the marchers and the ire of the bystanders.

A captivating, bookish tribute to an unstoppable upstander that will empower the youngest activists.

(timeline, further reading) (Picture-book biography. 4-7)