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March: Book Two - Community Reviews back

by John Lewis, Nate Powell, Andrew Aydin
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pedestrienne
pedestrienne rated it 8 years ago
I think when the trilogy is completed this will be a comics classic. I get why they chose to frame it with barack obama's inaguration, but I don't think it was necessary - instead of putting me in historical perspective it brought me out of the story.this volume covers a lot of time and many people,...
pedestrienne
pedestrienne rated it 8 years ago
I think when the trilogy is completed this will be a comics classic. I get why they chose to frame it with barack obama's inaguration, but I don't think it was necessary - instead of putting me in historical perspective it brought me out of the story.this volume covers a lot of time and many people,...
I Live in Many Worlds
I Live in Many Worlds rated it 8 years ago
This is a disturbing, harrowing, yet beautiful and important continuation to John Lewis's role in the Civil Rights Movement. This continues after his early life within the SNCC and how he became one of the "Big Six" as well as what happened during the March on Washington. Once again, I do not fee...
Chris' Fish Place
Chris' Fish Place rated it 8 years ago
Wow. I don't know what is more compelling the true story or the artwork.
TeaStitchRead
TeaStitchRead rated it 8 years ago
March Book Two comes after the success of the cafeteria and luncheon sit-ins in Tennessee. Lewis star is rising among the different Civil Rights groups and within his own SNCC. The SNCC decide to take on the bus companies in the wake of the US Supreme Court decision of Boynton v. Virginia. This new ...
Inkspot Fancy
Inkspot Fancy rated it 10 years ago
March continues to be an incredible book, a first-hand look at what the Civil Rights fight of the '60s was like. In this volume, we get a look at sit-ins, at the Freedom Rides and, at the very end, at the Birmingham church bombing. The book is a mix of huge moments that will be remembered long fro...
Tower of Iron Will
Tower of Iron Will rated it 10 years ago
In the course of the Civil Rights Movement no one was arrested, beaten, fire hosed, and spat on more than John Lewis, but he never abandoned his commitment to the ideal of nonviolent social protest. Today he is one of the representatives of the state of Georgia in the United States Congress. He is t...
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