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The book itch freedom truth & harlem's greatest bookstore
The book itch freedom truth & harlem's greatest bookstore












the book itch freedom truth & harlem the book itch freedom truth & harlem the book itch freedom truth & harlem

Nelson tells more about the store, which closed in 1975, and her personal connection, in end material that includes photographs and a bibliography.This companion to No Crystal Stair(2012) introduces younger readers to Nelson’s great-uncle, Lewis Michaux Sr., owner of Harlem’s National Memorial African Bookstore. Read to learn, his father tells him, and to learn how “to figure out for yourself what is true.” In the aftermath of Malcolm X’s death, Louie is comforted by his father’s reminder that “His words will never leave us.” And Louie thinks about the importance of words, and the importance of their bookstore as a place to find them in a picture book strikingly illustrated by R. Young Louie shares the history of the store, which his father could not get a bank loan to open because the banker believed “Black people don’t read.” And he shares a sense of the vibrant, vivid gathering place the store is, with its “zillion books” by Black people-African Americans, Africans-and others who aren’t white with its many visitors from the famous (Muhammad Ali, Malcolm X) to the anonymous (the boy who spends every Saturday reading at the store) with its readings and rallies a place of activism and action. Vaunda Micheaux Nelson revisits the topic of Lewis Michaux and the National Memorial African Bookstore that were the subject of her singular young adult novel No Crystal Stair, here introducing her great uncle and his Harlem store in a picture book told in the engaging fictionalized voice of Lewis Michaux’s son.

the book itch freedom truth & harlem

Age 8 and older The Book Itch: Freedom, Truth and Harlem’s Greatest Bookstore by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson














The book itch freedom truth & harlem's greatest bookstore