Bound To Stay Bound

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Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 06/01/2017 Gr 2–5—Americans describe their country as the "land of the free" every time they sing their national anthem, but how often do they take a step back and really think about what that phrase means? Starting with the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, this book considers how freedom has been expanded and restricted by governmental, racial, religious, and economic factors. Demonstrating that freedom in practice can be the framework that provides citizens with rights and protections, the author explains the significance of the Bill of Rights, then goes into more detail about slavery, labor laws, immigration policies, and voting expansion. Using a question-and-answer format, the conversational text incorporates sentence fragments and mimics an animated adult/child discussion. Carefully designed and well-executed watercolor and pencil illustrations spill over the pages, adding information, detail, and humor to the text. The images depict people of varying ethnicities, religious dress, and ages; a person using a wheelchair; same-sex couples; etc. Presenting so many topics necessarily leads to some simplification, but Shamir offers enough content to give readers a general idea and inspire them to investigate further. VERDICT An effective place for children to begin learning about the concept of freedom. A general nonfiction purchase.—Lucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher's School, Richmond, VA - Copyright 2017 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Booklist - 06/01/2017 Similar in style to What’s the Big Deal about First Ladies (2016), Shamir and Faulkner’s latest book takes on a broader, more abstract concept: freedom. The result is an attractive large-format volume offering generalities about history, even as it sometimes falls short on specifics and coherence. Loosely organized in a chronological question-and-answer framework, the books traces freedom-related events through American’s past, beginning with the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution and continuing with rights initially denied but later granted to large groups of individuals, such as enslaved people, Native Americans, women, children, workers, and African Americans living under Jim Crow laws. Interesting fact boxes supplement the main text, but the pace of change seems so quick that winning civil rights, voting rights, and a living wage may appear relatively easy to children with little prior knowledge of history. Bolstering the upbeat tone of the writing while emphasizing the racial and religious diversity of Americans, the lively watercolor-and-pencil illustrations are consistently engaging and occasionally endearing. A hopeful, idealistic portrayal of freedom in America. - Copyright 2017 Booklist.

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