Copyright Date:
2021
Edition Date:
2021
Release Date:
12/28/21
Illustrator:
Evans, Ashley,
Pages:
1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN:
0-374-31345-8
ISBN 13:
978-0-374-31345-6
Dewey:
921
LCCN:
2021027782
Dimensions:
29 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Rather than tell Aretha Franklin's entire story, this focused biography concentrates on her trailblazing song "Respect" and its impact on the Civil Rights Movement. Short passages relate Aretha's musical background in the church and on tour with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. These experiences laid the foundation when 24-year-old Aretha composed "Respect" in 1967. As Abdurraqib describes how the song became an anthem for people protesting racism and war, he includes an acrostic poem based on Aretha's choral R-E-S-P-E-C-T and uses the weather metaphorically to convey the cloudy skies of oppression and the light that the song brought to marches and homes. Evans' vibrant and expressive full-page digital illustrations with people of varying skin tones reinforce this imagery. Among the concluding illustrations are Aretha receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom (unspecified by the text) and renderings of today's young people continuing Aretha's call by protesting for ackLivesMatter, clean water, and more social justice. An author's note fills in more details. Carole Boston Weatherford's RESPECT: Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul (2020) offers another look at the artist's life.
Kirkus Reviews
The timeless Queen of Soul is introduced to a new generation.In his picture-book debut, National Book Award longlisted author Abdurraqib traces Aretha Franklin's groundbreaking career as a singer and her legacy as a civil rights activist. Beginning with her childhood singing gospel in her father's church, the story covers her time traveling with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., her rise to international stardom, and the emergence of her iconic signature song "Respect" as a popular and powerful anthem of Black and female empowerment during the 1960s. The text is written mostly in simple expository prose except for an acrostic poem on one double-page spread in which the first letters of each line spell out the word respect. Evans' vibrant digital illustrations highlight Franklin's beauty and vitality and the racial diversity of the people who were in her thrall. As acknowledged in the backmatter, attempting to encapsulate all that Franklin was in a picture book is a difficult task, and indeed, the book feels overambitious at times, but its message regarding music's power to help love conquer hate is compelling.A sweet, upbeat testimonial to the ongoing, far-reaching impact of a dearly departed legend. (author's note) (Picture book biography. 4-8)
A young Aretha Franklin captivates her community with the song "Respect" during the height of the Civil Rights Movement, in this striking picture book biography that will embolden today's young readers to sing their own truth. When Aretha Franklin sang, she didn't just sing...she sparked a movement. As a performer and a civil rights activist, the Queen of Soul used her voice to uplift freedom fighters and the Black community during the height of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. Her song "Respect" was an anthem of identity, survival, and joy. It gave hope to people trying to make change. And when Aretha sang, the world sang along. With Hanif Abdurraqib's poetic voice and Ashley Evans's dynamic illustrations, Sing, Aretha, Sing! demonstrates how one brave voice can give new power to a nation, and how the legacy of Aretha Franklin lives on in a world still fighting for freedom.