Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Lest We Forget by Velma Maia ThomasLest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas


Thanks to Lydia Rasmussen of The Quarto Group, I am giving away 3 print copies of ‘Lest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas. This is a giveaway in celebration of Black History Month.

Description Lest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas


Based on materials from the nationally acclaimed Black Holocaust Exhibit, Lest We Forget documents the plight of an estimated 100 million Africans, from their rich pre-slavery culture to their enslavement in a foreign land. This book is a collection of stirring historic papers, memoirs, personal effects, and photographs brought to life in a unique, three-dimensional, interactive format. Lest We Forget chronicles the unyielding strength of a people who refused to be broken.

Taste the sweetness of freedom and the bitter struggle for equality through the documents that impacted the lives of an entire race. Freedom’s Children is a stirring collection of photographs and removable documents that bring to life the heart-wrenching and inspiring tale of freedmen and freedwomen during Reconstruction and into the twentieth century.

Throughout the twentieth century, African Americans would trouble the waters of America—agitating, challenging, and defying the status quo. We Shall Not Be Moved chronicles the struggles and triumphs of African Americans leading up to and during the Civil Rights Movement. Feel the strength of those entrenched in the fight for justice through interactive, removable documents.

Praise Lest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas


One of The Root’s Favorite Reads of 2019- Jay Connor, The Root

Winner of an Alex Award of the American Library Association (ALA)
Winner of a Literary Honor Award for Non-fiction by the Black Caucus of the ALA (1998)
Selected by Essence magazine as a time-treasured gift item (December 1999)

About Velma Maia ThomasLest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas


Velma Maia Thomas is the creator and curator of the Black Holocaust Exhibit, a collection of original documents on slavery and resistance housed at the Shrines of the Black Madonna Cultural Center and Bookstore. In addition to Lest We Forget, she is the author of No Man Can Hinder: The Journey from Slavery to Emancipation Through Song, and the co-author of Emancipation Proclamation: Forever Free.

She was selected as a subject expert for the documentary Underground Railroad: The William Still Story, featured on PBS, and has served as a scholar in residence at Penn Center, as an adjunct professor in the Department of African American Studies at Georgia State University, and as an instructor at the NEH Summer Institute “America’s Reconstruction: The Untold Story.” Velma holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Howard University, a master’s degree in political science from Emory University, and a graduate-level certificate in heritage preservation from Georgia State University.

Website: http://www.velmamaiathomas.com/

Buy Lest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas


Amazon
Barnes&Noble
Indiebound

Giveaway Lest We Forget by Velma Maia Thomas


This giveaway is open to Canada and the U.S. only.  It ends on February 14, 2020 midnight pacific time.  Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Hidden Figures by Margot Lee ShetterlyHidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly


Back in the day of the Jim Crow South, NASA was desperate to find mathematicians to work for them. ‘Hidden Figures’ is the true story of the many female African-American mathematicians who worked in the space program.  They were known as “colored computers”.

‘Hidden Figures’ is the story of 5 of them, Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, Christine Darden, and Gloria Champine. Their story is told through interviews, documents, correspondence, etc.

Until I found out about this book, I had no idea that NASA had so many female African American Mathematicians working for them.  Hell, back in the 50’s and 60’s that not only would hav3e been considered “men’s work” but also almost exclusive to white men, especially in the south!  So, when I found out about ‘hidden Figures’ and the history it tells, I jumped to the opportunity to read you.

You may think because it is non-fiction that it is a dry account of what happened but you would be wrong.  Margot Lee Shetterly wrote about both the private and public lives of these women which made it a more personal touch and a riveting read. ‘Hidden Figures’ is truly a hidden gem.  If you like history in general, the space race, women’s history, or African American history, this is a must read!

I received a free print copy of this book.

5/5

About Margot Lee ShetterlyHidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly

Margot Lee Shetterly grew up in Hampton, Virginia, where she knew many of the women in her book Hidden Figures. She is an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellow and the recipient of a Virginia Foundation for the Humanities grant for her research on women in computing. She lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.