Bound To Stay Bound

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 Unlawful orders : a portrait of Dr. James B. Williams, Tuskeegee airman, surgeon, and activist
 Author: Binns, Barbara

 Publisher:  Scholastic Focus (2022)

 Dewey: 940.54
 Classification: Biography
 Physical Description: 305 p., ill., 21 cm

 BTSB No: 120214 ISBN: 9781338754261
 Ages: 8-12 Grades: 3-7

 Subjects:
 Williams, James, -- 1919-2016
 United States. -- Army Air Forces. -- Bombardment Group, 477th -- Biography
 African American physicians -- Illinois -- Chicago -- Biography
 Surgeons -- Illinois -- Chicago -- Biography
 Air pilots -- United States -- Biography
 World War, 1939-1945
 African Americans -- Social conditions -- 20th century
 South Side (Chicago, Ill.) -- Biography

Price: $23.28

Summary:
The inspiring story of James Buchanan "JB" Williams who became a doctor, served as a medic in the US military and eventually joined the elite Tuskegee Airmen, where he fought to change the minds of all who believed Black men couldn't make good soldiers. After the war, his role as doctor and Civil Rights activist pushed past injustices placed on Black Americans.

Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: MG
   Reading Level: 7.90
   Points: 6.0   Quiz: 517572

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (09/01/22)
   School Library Journal (11/01/22)
   Booklist (+) (06/01/22)

Full Text Reviews:

Booklist - 06/01/2022 *Starred Review* Binns fleshes out an account of the 1945 Freeman Field mutiny, in which more than 100 Tuskegee Airmen were arrested for nonviolently trying to integrate an officers’ club, by focusing on the experiences of one of its participants, James B. (JB) Williams, and his family. In the process, she delivers a multigenerational success story that is also a scorching indictment of the overt racism that African Americans were forced to endure in the wake of Reconstruction. Setting the tone by opening with a 1907 lynching in the Texas hometown of JB’s father, the author then chronicles the vicious inequities of the sharecropper system and segregation, the deeds of heroic Black soldiers, the ugly racial backlash during the “Red Summer” of 1919 when those soldiers came home, the history and war record of the Airmen in WWII, and the founding of the National Medical Association during the later civil rights movement to address the medical profession’s rampant prejudice against Black doctors, like JB, and their patients. Based on interviews and oral histories as well as printed sources and illustrated with a mix of family snapshots and sometimes disturbing period photos, this puts the story of U.S. race relations in the twentieth century in its bleakest and most brutal light while celebrating the courage of some of those who lived it. - Copyright 2022 Booklist.

School Library Journal - 11/01/2022 Gr 5 Up—Binns provides an in-depth look at the life and legacy of Dr. James B. Williams, whose tireless efforts helped integrate the military and medicine. Binns begins by recounting segregation with a focus on the military, the First World War, and the horrors of the Red Summer of 1919. Williams became a member of the Medical Corps in 1942 and then later a pilot, ultimately joining the Tuskegee Airmen. As a Black officer, he was denied entry into the Officers' Club and led protests to integrate it. Widely recognized as a major step towards integrating the military, the protests became known as the Freeman Field Mutiny. After the war, Williams worked as a doctor in Chicago. Segregation in medicine led to denial of care and death for many Black Americans; since these racist policies carried over to the American Medical Association, Williams became active in the National Medical Association (which did not have race or gender requirements for membership) and continued to fight segregation. His work led him to the office of President Kennedy as part of the lobbying for what became the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which denied funding to hospitals that practiced segregation and ultimately forced many facilities to desegregate. While the text is lengthy, readers will be rewarded by Binns's fluid and absorbing writing. Includes numerous photographs and extensive back matter. VERDICT Strongly recommended for middle school students as it fills a significant gap in YA nonfiction covering the critical fight to integrate the military and medicine.—Karen T. Bilton - Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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