From School Library Journal
Kindergarten-Grade 3–A fictional account of the early-20th-century American Suffragist movement. Susan watches her mother parade and picket in front of the White House, absorbing the message that voting is preferred over violence as a means to change. When Mama is hauled away in handcuffs, Susan takes up the call, her sign demanding her mother's release from jail. President Wilson's attention achieves the young protagonist's goal, but it is still some time before Mama achieves hers. A historical note provides the language of the 19th Amendment and places some of the players and their actions in context. Alice Paul appears to be the inspiration for this story, which infuses an important chapter in history with humor, spunk, and drama. The color illustrations are adequate, but Laugesen's caricatures are not as strong as the landscapes and architectural details. Shana Corey's
You Forgot Your Skirt, Amelia Bloomer! (Scholastic, 2000) and Catherine Thimmesh's
Madam President (Houghton, 2004) provide additional insight into the cause and the characters.–
Wendy Lukehart, Washington DC Public Library Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Gr. 1-3. In this picture book for older readers set at the turn of the last century, the narrator, Susan Elizabeth, is the daughter of a suffragist. Mama dresses Susan in bloomers and takes her to rallies and to picket the White House. Then Mama is arrested and goes to jail for six months. Eventually, her work is rewarded: by a silver pin that says "Jailed for Freedom," and by the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment. This purposive book personalizes the fight for woman's suffrage, but none of the characters seem very real. Mama's dialogue is mostly high-sounding slogans; Papa is a patronizing caricature. Susan Elizabeth isn't very credible: she does everything from chatting with President Wilson to miraculously finding eggs during a parade to hurl at tormentors. That said, this does give a sense of the momentum of the movement and its importance to a young audience. The art, executed in colored pencils, relies heavily on the purple, white, and green of the suffragists' flag. Interestingly, the soft focus gives a more "ladylike" look to some of the proceedings. A note offers historical background.
Ilene CooperCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.