the authors use duel narrators with distinct perspectives to walk the reader through history with a broad view not skewed to just one narrow ideology. Bey's intelligent use of cartooning makes heavy ideas accessible and the book's humor lightens tough situations and moments without erasing their gravity. because the research and hard work of the writers and cartoonist covers so many topics, historical figures, and events (and makes it look effortless), this book will create or reawaken curiousity about black history in children and adults that read it. it will make you laugh, it will make you angry, and it will fill you with pride and hope. every african-american family, every library, and every comic book enthusiast should have a copy of this book. and when you get your copy, don't stash it on a musty shelf. put it on your coffee table... where it can do some good! as for me, the copy which the publisher was good enough to give me to review is going to my local public library, but not until i buy another one for my own coffee table.
holla!
-samax
ghettoManga.com
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5 comments:
Now this is a review I can get behind... A piece of history that NO medium can tarnish! A must for the brothers--- mixed in with Kyle Baker's Nat Turner and a Black Panther omnibus ( Showcasing where we're from, where we've been, and where we need to be!)
Peace
no doubt.
i'm really proud of this book, and think people should buy it. it's the kind of thing that people always complain about the lack of on some "if only this existed"... well, now it does...
COP IT!
I told my shop to get this. This is what's great about the medium....
right!
word, money!
i'ma cop that this next payday!
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