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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Tonya Bolden , Eric VelasquezPublisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc Imprint: HarperCollins Dimensions: Width: 23.80cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 28.90cm Weight: 0.452kg ISBN: 9780062967404ISBN 10: 0062967401 Pages: 40 Publication Date: 04 October 2022 Recommended Age: From 4 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsBolden's bold, strong, conversational prose sets the scene, representing courageous, talented Black people strategizing to keep their dignity in an unfair world. Velasquez beautifully brings to life settings, families, and communities. A richly layered, powerful introduction to an entrepreneur and the problems he solved. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In descriptive text and an upbeat voice, Bolden recalls the Black mail carrier from Harlem who recognized that Black Americans were going places. Velasquez lends a fitting and beautiful scrapbook effect to the story. An effective way to address Jim Crow laws and segregation as well as resourcefulness and determination. -- Booklist (starred review) Bolden has perfectly combined the painful story of Jim Crow and segregation with the strength and determination of Black Americans to live a full life. The illustrations pull readers along on this American experience known too well to some and a revelation for others. A highly recommended addition to any collection. -- School Library Journal (starred review) Bolden recounts the moving story of mail carrier Victor Hugo Green. Working images of paper ephemera into the pages, Velasquez melds portraiture and background illustration, producing a visually engaging account of history in the making. -- Publishers Weekly (starred review) With lively language that hovers between poetry and prose, Bolden's biographical account carefully introduces the intersections of historical preconditions that led to the creation of Green Book and Green's disposition and resilience. Velasquez's smooth oil paint illustrations radiantly depict everyday Black folks on the go. -- Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review) Velasquez's scrapbook-style, painterly vignettes capture period detail and nimbly complement Bolden's conversational free-verse text. -- Horn Book Magazine Bolden's bold, strong, conversational prose sets the scene, representing courageous, talented Black people strategizing to keep their dignity in an unfair world. Velasquez beautifully brings to life settings, families, and communities. A richly layered, powerful introduction to an entrepreneur and the problems he solved. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In descriptive text and an upbeat voice, Bolden recalls the Black mail carrier from Harlem who recognized that Black Americans were going places. Velasquez lends a fitting and beautiful scrapbook effect to the story. An effective way to address Jim Crow laws and segregation as well as resourcefulness and determination. -- Booklist (starred review) Bolden has perfectly combined the painful story of Jim Crow and segregation with the strength and determination of Black Americans to live a full life. The illustrations pull readers along on this American experience known too well to some and a revelation for others. A highly recommended addition to any collection. -- School Library Journal (starred review) Bolden recounts the moving story of mail carrier Victor Hugo Green. Working images of paper ephemera into the pages, Velasquez melds portraiture and background illustration, producing a visually engaging account of history in the making. -- Publishers Weekly (starred review) With lively language that hovers between poetry and prose, Bolden's biographical account carefully introduces the intersections of historical preconditions that led to the creation of Green Book and Green's disposition and resilience. Velasquez's smooth oil paint illustrations radiantly depict everyday Black folks on the go. -- Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review) Velasquez's scrapbook-style, painterly vignettes capture period detail and nimbly complement Bolden's conversational free-verse text. -- Horn Book Magazine In descriptive text and an upbeat voice, Bolden recalls the Black mail carrier from Harlem who recognized that Black Americans were going places. Velasquez lends a fitting and beautiful scrapbook effect to the story. An effective way to address Jim Crow laws and segregation as well as resourcefulness and determination. -- Booklist (starred review) Bolden's bold, strong, conversational prose sets the scene, representing courageous, talented Black people strategizing to keep their dignity in an unfair world. Velasquez beautifully brings to life settings, families, and communities. A richly layered, powerful introduction to an entrepreneur and the problems he solved. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Bolden has perfectly combined the painful story of Jim Crow and segregation with the strength and determination of Black Americans to live a full life. The illustrations pull readers along on this American experience known too well to some and a revelation for others. A highly recommended addition to any collection. -- School Library Journal (starred review) Velasquez's scrapbook-style, painterly vignettes capture period detail and nimbly complement Bolden's conversational free-verse text. -- Horn Book Magazine In descriptive text and an upbeat voice, Bolden recalls the Black mail carrier from Harlem who recognized that Black Americans were going places. Velasquez lends a fitting and beautiful scrapbook effect to the story. An effective way to address Jim Crow laws and segregation as well as resourcefulness and determination. -- Booklist (starred review) Bolden's bold, strong, conversational prose sets the scene, representing courageous, talented Black people strategizing to keep their dignity in an unfair world. Velasquez beautifully brings to life settings, families, and communities. A richly layered, powerful introduction to an entrepreneur and the problems he solved. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In descriptive text and an upbeat voice, Bolden recalls the Black mail carrier from Harlem who recognized that Black Americans were going places. Velasquez lends a fitting and beautiful scrapbook effect to the story. An effective way to address Jim Crow laws and segregation as well as resourcefulness and determination. -- Booklist (starred review) Author InformationTonya Bolden's books have earned much praise and numerous starred reviews. Her work has been recognized with the NCTE Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children; CBC/NCSS Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People, and the NCSS Carter G. Woodson Middle Level Book Award, and she is the recipient of the Children's Book Guild of Washington, DC's Nonfiction Award for her body of work. Maritcha: A Nineteenth-Century American Girl was a Coretta Scott King Author Honor book. Eric Velasquez has illustrated numerous children's books, most recently Schomburg: The Man Who Built a Library, by Carole Boston Weatherford. He won the Pura Belpre illustrator award for his illustrations in Grandma's Gift. He won the John Steptoe New Talent Illustrator Award for his illustrations of The Piano Man, written by Debbi Chocolate. Bolden and Velasquez previously collaborated on the picture book Beautiful Moon. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |