Seven Million Steps
The True Story of Dick Gregory's Run for the Hungry
-
- Pedido anticipado
-
- Se espera: 3 feb 2026
-
- $229.00
-
- Pedido anticipado
-
- $229.00
Descripción editorial
From award-winning creators, Derrick Barnes, Frank Morrison, and Dr. Christian Gregory comes the true story of comedian and activist Dick Gregory’s remarkable Food Run of 1976.
1 man. 1,011 hours. 3,200 miles. 7 million steps.
What would you do?
In April of 1976, Dick Gregory sets off on a Herculean and grueling two-and-a-half month run. His goal: to raise awareness about the epidemic of poverty and food insecurity in America.
Sleeping in motels and consuming nothing but fruit juices, vitamins and water, he runs from Los Angeles to New York City. And in each city, he stops to speak the truth about injustice. About the plight of the penniless. About the hopeless.
Lyrical text, stunning art, and compelling backmatter come together to ask you—yes you—what would you do if you had a wild idea to stand up for something you believe in? Find out how far Dick Gregory’s belief in feeding the hungry took him in this unforgettable story of an incredible journey that still reverberates today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Authors Barnes and Gregory begin this stirring account from the life of activist and comedian Dick Gregory (1932–2017) with a question: "No matter where you come from or what family you belong to.... what would you do if you knew someone who goes to bed every night without having supper?" In Morrison's dynamic oil paintings, a child puts their head down on a table, a figure in silhouette gazes into an empty refrigerator, and an adult and two children are shown alongside bare pantry shelves. To raise awareness about global food insecurity, Gregory proposes "what seems like a wild idea": running from Los Angeles to New York City while abstaining from nearly all nourishment. Leaving in April 1976, Gregory travels 50 miles a day on foot, at every stop touting the cause and at times joined by runners and even celebrities. Urgent second-person lines that invest readers in the protagonist's effort prove as elegant as the visuals of Gregory moving fluidly across a range of landscapes. It's a compassionate, powerfully told portrait that asks of readers, "Will you simply stand still... or will you run until you can't run anymore?" Background characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Contextualizing back matter and authors' notes conclude. Ages 4–8.