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Born Dec. 13, 1903, in Norfolk, Va., Ella Josephine Baker grew up under the influence of her grandfather and grandmother, freed slaves who toiled on the farm on which they had been enslaved until they were able to purchase it. Granddaddy was a preacher, and Ella listened intently in the pew: ā€œHe preached / Give to others. / He preached / Join together. / He spoke / Freedom. / He asked / What do you hope to accomplish?ā€ Equally influential in the young girlā€™s life was her mother, whose mottoā€”ā€œLift as you climbā€ā€”shaped Ellaā€™s life.

When Ella was 14, she was sent to a boarding school and attended high school and college. After she graduated and moved to New York City, Ella asked herself, ā€œWhat do I hope to accomplish?ā€ Her answerā€”she would lift as she climbed. Ella began to fight for the rights of her people. When she spoke in churches and other settings, she asked her audience the same question Granddaddy had posed years earlier and shared her motherā€™s motto.This timely of Ellaā€™s energetic, devoted life is complemented by gripping portrayals of the civil rights movement that capture the fear, sadness, resolve, anger, and intensity of participants. Young readers will encounter a woman worth emulatingā€”a person who didnā€™t seek the limelight, who didnā€™t want to create her own movement of followers, and who understood that seeking justice meant more than fighting only for the rights of African Americans. Hers was a more encompassing vision: ā€œWe are not fighting for the freedom of the Negro alone, but for the freedom of the human spirit.ā€ Though recommended for children ages 4 to 8, this book is better suited for ages 8 and older. (Margaret K. McElderry Books)

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