Starred Review ALA Booklist
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Starred Review The rise of the automobile gave Americans freedom on the open road t not all Americans. To help Black travelers navigate stores, gas stations, hotels, and other businesses, Harlem postal carrier Victor Hugo Green created the Green Book in 1936. In this young adult adaptation of her New York Times Notable Book, Taylor goes beyond the history of the Green Book to place it within the context of the country's struggles with race and social mobility. While the author gives a chronological progression of the Green Book, from a short, New York City based guide to an international one, thematic chapters address Jim Crow laws and dangers to Black drivers, businesses one would encounter in this guide, and Black Americans' burgeoning freedom to travel and vacation. Additional chapters show the influence the Green Book had on the Great Migration, Black women business owners, and Black-owned music venues. Enhancing the impeccable writing is an attractive design with Green Book covers, images of the guide's sites, and other period photographs. The final chapter highlights the "double-edged sword of progress" as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ceased the need for the Green Book but also closed many of its Black-owned businesses. Taylor concludes with a look at modern Black travel. An impressive insight into Black history that still resonates today.
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
The history of a travel guide for African Americans that reflected far more than just issues of mobility for its users.From 1936 to 1966, the Green Book was a successful guide supporting Black people traveling during a time of segregation. Its creator, letter carrier Victor Green, creatively developed his publication into a wide-ranging product that stood out from similar guides of the era. As the automobile became ubiquitous, African Americans sought guidance about establishments that would accept their business and where they could be safe. Discriminatory practices were common around the U.S., so Green expanded his coverage to include most of the country. The Green Book also served as a way to promote Black businesses. Following World War II, it highlighted historically Black colleges where returning veterans, denied admission to predominantly White institutions, could use the GI Bill for education. From 1949 to 1957, Green's Reservation Bureau initiative supported customers with navigating international travel. Taylor has skillfully adapted her acclaimed 2020 adult title for teens into a smooth, readable volume that provides context for the rise of Black travel guides and the societal changes that Green and his wife, Alma, responded to. Her insights into the significance of the Green Book for women are fascinating, as is the compelling look at the costs and benefits of integration for Black Americans. Numerous images greatly enhance the text.Meticulous research and lively anecdotes combine to provide a powerful volume of social history. (notes, bibliography, image credits, index) (Nonfiction. 12-16)
School Library Journal Starred Review
(Sat Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Gr 7 Up —Adapting her phenomenal exploration of Black travel, Taylor outfits this identically titled offering with the pacing and organization perfect for a younger audience. For nearly 30 years, the Green Book provided Black travelers with listings of safe places to find goods and services first throughout the U.S., then around the world. Particularly prior to the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, driving while Black, especially in "sundown towns," could very well be deadly. Victor Hugo Green, a mailman by day, set about the life-saving task of listing businesses—accommodations, restaurants, barber shops, beauty salons, tailors, gas stations, nightclubs, and more—that could be relied upon to serve Black travelers reliably and with dignity. This was an especially tricky proposition in the segregated South, but was not much easier in the redlined cities of the North where discrimination was practiced more covertly. The Green Book served as "an ingenious solution to a horrific problem" and Taylor walks readers through its many iterations as it guided travelers along roads, rails, and even through the air, describing the many complications that continuously arose for Black travelers, who frequently found themselves following the rules and still being hassled by racists. Exceptionally supported with photographs, maps, newspaper articles, and other artifacts, this is a priceless addition for researchers and readers seeking to understand not just the complexities and insidiousness of centuries of systemic racism in America, but the drive and determination required to fight white supremacy. VERDICT An essential first purchase for all school and public libraries.—Abby Bussen
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
The history of a travel guide for African Americans that reflected far more than just issues of mobility for its users.From 1936 to 1966, the Green Book was a successful guide supporting Black people traveling during a time of segregation. Its creator, letter carrier Victor Green, creatively developed his publication into a wide-ranging product that stood out from similar guides of the era. As the automobile became ubiquitous, African Americans sought guidance about establishments that would accept their business and where they could be safe. Discriminatory practices were common around the U.S., so Green expanded his coverage to include most of the country. The Green Book also served as a way to promote Black businesses. Following World War II, it highlighted historically Black colleges where returning veterans, denied admission to predominantly White institutions, could use the GI Bill for education. From 1949 to 1957, Green's Reservation Bureau initiative supported customers with navigating international travel. Taylor has skillfully adapted her acclaimed 2020 adult title for teens into a smooth, readable volume that provides context for the rise of Black travel guides and the societal changes that Green and his wife, Alma, responded to. Her insights into the significance of the Green Book for women are fascinating, as is the compelling look at the costs and benefits of integration for Black Americans. Numerous images greatly enhance the text.Meticulous research and lively anecdotes combine to provide a powerful volume of social history. (notes, bibliography, image credits, index) (Nonfiction. 12-16)