With Black History Month set to begin in February, parents
interested in educational material for their children may want to take a look
at two new publications in the Campfire Graphic Biography series. Nelson Mandela: The Unconquerable
Soul and Muhammad Ali: The King of the Ring, both
written by Lewis Helfand, are aimed at the older child. They focus on the biographical narrative to
illustrate the importance of the men as dynamic leaders in the struggles of
their people for equality and dignity as well as their contributions to the
world community. Both men are seen as
inspirational figures.
Nelson Mandela, illustrated by Sankha
Banerjee, begins in 1985 with the future South African President in Pollsmoor
Prison. It then goes back to his birth
in 1918 where he was given a name we are told is translated as
"troublemaker." It goes on to
highlight his early life, his political involvement with the ANC, his years in
prison, and his role in shaping the new society after his release and the end
of apartheid. Unlike most Campfire editions, ninety percent of this book is in
black and white. It is only at the end
when apartheid has been defeated that the story bursts out in color.
The Muhammad Ali biography, illustrated by Lalit Kumar Sharma,
also begins in medias res, with the young Cassius Clay set
to fight Cory Baker in 1958, before taking readers back to the boxer's childhood
in Louisville, Kentucky. It talks about
his early career and explains how he was encouraged to adopt a gimmick—predicting
the round he would knock out his opponent—to capture public attention. It describes his embrace of the Nation of
Islam, his championship fights, his refusal to be inducted into the army, and
the stripping of his title. It details
his comeback and his public service throughout the world after retiring from
the ring, ending with his award of the Presidential Medal of Honor.
Both editions include posters which can be detached from the
book. The Ali biography has an
interesting feature on making graphic novels, and an appendix discussing the
records some of the other boxers Ali fought and well as his daughter. The Mandela biography's appendix is a
glossary and a reprint of William Ernest Henley's "Invictus," a poem
that Mandela looked to for strength during his darkest periods.
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