Not Done Yet
Shirley Chisholm's Fight for Change
-
- $11.99
-
- $11.99
Publisher Description
Audisee eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and sentence highlighting for an engaging read aloud experience!
Shirley Chisholm was a natural-born fighter. She didn’t like to be bossed and she wanted things to be fair.
Brooklyn-born Shirley Chisholm was smart and ambitious. She poured her energy into whatever she did—from teaching young children to becoming Brooklyn’s first Black assemblywoman. Not afraid to blaze a trail, she became the first Black woman elected to Congress and the first woman to seriously run for US president. With a vision of liberty and justice for all, she worked for equal rights, for the environment, for children, and for health care. Even now, her legacy lives on and inspires others to continue her work . . . which is not done yet.
Stirring free verse by Tameka Fryer Brown and evocative illustrations by Nina Crews provide an inspirational look at changemaker Shirley Chisholm.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Fryer Brown and Crews spotlight trailblazer Shirley Chisholm (1924–2005) in a picture book biography that identifies the first Black Congresswoman as the political forbear of Kamala Harris, Barack Obama, and other contemporary leaders. Introducing the self-proclaimed "unbought and unbossed" Chisholm, anticipatory text states, "Before she was born, Shirley would kick so hard, her mother knew she was aching to come out and fight." A childhood partially spent in Barbados informed her of "the unfair way certain people were treated in America.... She wanted to do something about it." The refrain "She wasn't done yet" carries Chisholm forward from a role at a Brooklyn political club to the New York State Assembly to Congress, where as "a righteous rebel who earned respect... Shirley championed bold ideas," continuing with a serious run for president in 1972. Brown's narrative free verse and Crews's heavily patterned digital vector art contemporize Chisholm's "Let us move beyond hate" message as just as relevant today. Creators' notes and a timeline conclude. Ages 5–10.