Published by Scholastic Press
Summary: Tybre Faw grew up learning Black history and was particularly inspired by John Lewis. In 2018, at the age of ten, he convinced his grandmothers to take him to Selma to be part of the commemoration of 1965’s Bloody Sunday. Tybre met John on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, and the two became friends. They walked together again in 2019 and in 2020 when John Lewis had been diagnosed with cancer. Lewis died a few months later, and Tybre was invited to recite one of the senator’s favorite poems, “Invictus” by William Ernest Henley at the memorial service. Includes additional information about both John Lewis and Tybre Faw, a timeline of Lewis’s life, a list of sources and resources for further reading, photos from both the 1960’s and the interactions between John and Tybre, and the text of “Invictus”. 40 pages; grades 2-5.
Pros: I marvel at the way this book is written, using beautiful poetry and watercolor illustrations to weave together the lives of both John Lewis and Tyre Faw, and showing the intersection between the civil rights and Black Lives Matter movements. The back matter adds a lot and gives resources for further exploration.
Cons: I found it a little difficult to figure out when and at what age Tybre met John; it would have been helpful to me to have those dates included in the timeline.
June 20, 2022 at 09:38PM Janet Dawson