It’s primary day in Michigan, where the main offices of ForeWord magazine are located.
Unfortunately, the National Parties are punishing the state for wanting to have
more a voice in the election process by canceling some or all of their
delegates to the national conventions. While that’s nothing to celebrate, it is
Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday, and for that, we have a few book
suggestions from Sleeping Bear Press.

Riding
to Washington (Sleeping Bear Press, 978-1-58536-324-7) is the story of
a girl who rides with her father on a bus from Indianapolis to Washington, D.C., to see
and hear Dr. King speak.
At first, she’s convinced that the only reason she’s going
is because she’s too much trouble for her mother to handle alone, what with her
two baby brothers. On the way, however, she experiences first-hand the effects
of inequality and segregation and comes to understand the need for all people,
even little trouble-makers like herself, to do the right thing.
Author Gwenyth Swain’s father and grandfather made this
trip in 1963, to march for civil rights. The language of the book is colloquial
and historical – a choice that will provide discussion material for classrooms.
The book is beautifully illustrated by David Geister, with the colors, sites, and
textures of the '60s.
Sleeping Bear of Chelsea, Michigan, began publishing in
1998, and considers its authors and illustrators to be “the
heart and soul” of the press. Many of their books would be welcome additions to
public or home libraries. Here are two others that celebrate the trials and contributions
of Black Americans.

Let Them Play by Margot Theis Raven
Illustrated by Chris Ellison
978-1-58536-260-8
In 1955 there were 62 official Little League
programs in South Carolina, and all but one were white. This is the story of the Cannon
Street YMCA All-Stars, an all-black team, that wins the state tournament by
default when none of the other teams will play them. At the Little League
Baseball World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, the Cannon Street team is
invited as guests, but they are not allowed to play. Let Them Play takes its title from the chant shouted
by the spectators who attended the World Series final.

D is for Drinking Gourd: An African American Alphabet
by Nancy Sanders
Illustrated by E. B. Lewis
978-1-58536-293-6
D is for Drinking Gourd,
and the North Star that led through the night
from station to station on the Underground Railroad,
escaping on a dangerous flight.
From the abolitionists to the Harlem
Renaissance, D is for Drinking Gourd celebrates the role the African
American community has played in the shaping of America.