Showing posts with label Frances Lincoln. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frances Lincoln. Show all posts

Friday, 12 February 2021

This Book is Anti-Racist - 20 Lessons on How to Wake Up, Take Action, and Do The Work

Written by Tiffany Jewell Illustrated by Aurélia Durand

Published by Frances Lincoln Children’s Books ISBN: 978-0-7112-4520-4



“It’s not enough to be non-racist – we must be ANTI-RACIST.”

Tiffany Jewell quotes the legendary but also controversial human rights activist Angela Davies in the promotion of a book that arrives during the global struggle for equality. Her words are aided by the vivid, ‘Saved By the Bell’ 90’s style graphic illustrations of Aurélia Durand, her colour palette is warm and perfectly suited to the latitudes of the citizens of the global majority.

Jewell provides action plans and activities to help a young person to navigate towards the world as it could be. Focusing on methods to help an individual make changes in themselves first and then influence others we get to see how enlightenment can surround one in a powerful bubble of agency building the confidence to challenge hegemony.

Is this complex subject too difficult for children to grasp you might ask? The author thinks not as it is in our earliest years that prejudiced ideas form and it is at this age that they need to be understood and somehow challenged. I think there is an intention to raise awareness in parents and grandparents alike and perhaps it is they who need to engage with this book for their own benefit too. It is a cliché but they will have to ‘Unlearn what they have learned’ to get to grips with the possibilities advocated within its pages. The book also contains useful notes on the text, a glossary and selected bibliography to support further understanding.

The information is presented as New Knowledge and backed up by the author’s personal journey to raise herself to a position of useful authority. She uses step by step practices to form a better world and to help people cope with the old one so we can all be in a better place together. Though a Biblical cliché ‘the truth shall set you free’ and I certainly hope that this is the reality for the many rather than the few if we are to make any progress on justice.

The intention of the author is also to challenge performative behaviour as this is a serious subject that requires one to commit to being anti-racist and to stick to this position! To do the work. We will have to employ a new vocabulary to describe a world that is actually anti-racist. It will be hard for some to accept that the world has actually been violently shaped by racists for the benefit of racists.

I have previously reviewed a picture book called ‘Greta and the Giants’ by Zoé Tucker and Zoe Persico that focused on helping young readers to appreciate how they can play a part in the climate crisis debate, and I feel that This Book Is Anti-Racist can do the same. It will help children to help their elders to understand the inequities of racial prejudice and the work necessary to help them to ‘change their minds.’ The answers to these problems cannot be found in one publication, but Tiffany Jewell makes a great start and should be commended for taking a stand.






Friday, 5 April 2019

My AOI Book Review for Little People, Big Dreams - Muhammad Ali

Little People, Big Dreams – Muhammad Ali

Written by Isabel Sánchez Vegara

Illustrated by Brosmind

ISBN:978-1-78603-733-6

Published by Frances Lincoln

Reviewed by Karl Andy Foster


Brosmind website http://www.brosmind.com


Review
The life of one of The Greatest is richly evoked in this picture book. It illustrates his enduring legacy and the inspirational story behind his success.

Muhammmad Ali was one of my heroes. As a boy I watched his fights with excitement and pride. His poetic taunts and quick-witted ripostes brought a smile to my face every time. I am pleased to see a publication like this aimed at young children and he is a most fitting subject for the expansion of the ‘Little People, Big Dreams’popular line of books. Physicist Stephen Hawking also receives the same veneration.

The bold cover of this book shows you a hero athlete drawn in simple line and block colours style, posing ready for a fight. This perfect bound book packs a punch with it bright and vibrant end papers – POW! BAM! and OUCH! 

From the welcome spread it is clear that the authors wish you to be aware that this is a significant product and a rare one at that. The quirky line work is loose, curvaceous with balletic compositions. Brosmind’s work adds a playful take on this subject with changes of scale, bold expressions and Ali metamorphosing into Butterfly and Bee. 

A beautiful boy with a sense of righteousness is hell bent on exacting his vengeance upon a thief. His indignation is channeled into a more creative and constructive force thanks to the intervention of a community minded Police Officer.

The spread with the fight posters and prizes acts as a fitting tribute to this man of passion and integrity. He talked the talk and walked the walk – he inspired generations of sports fans and he is a towering role model for many African Americans.

The inclusion of a photographic timeline is problematic for me. It suggests that illustration isn’t a convincing enough medium to promote celebrity. I do agree that the written content is useful in this section and I have been enthusiastically quoting the words he lived by “Don’t count the days, make the days count.” 

In a time when it was extremely dangerous to speak out and stand up for something principled, Ali showed that his true power was not only in the ring but also on the world stage. An Olympic Boxing Champion in 1960 who used his influence to support many causes and when he lit the flame at the Atlanta Olympics in 1996 there wasn’t a dry eye in the stadium.


25 March 2019