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LARGER THAN LIFE by Anne Quirk

LARGER THAN LIFE

Lyndon B. Johnson and the Right To Vote

by Anne Quirk

Pub Date: July 27th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-324-01554-3
Publisher: Norton Young Readers

Profile of a president who turned out—in some ways, at least—to be the right man at the right time.

Taking middle graders approximately as far as Robert Caro’s epic biography of Lyndon Johnson has gotten to date, Quirk follows the 36th president from birth and early days in the Texas Hill Country to the time when, in the shockwave caused by the televised racial violence in Selma and elsewhere, he delivered “the best speech of his life” while ramming through the Voting Rights Act and other landmark Great Society legislation. She rightly notes that he had never been known previously as a civil rights firebrand. Instead, she paints him as a workaholic who, motivated by both a will to power and the idealistic belief that people are fundamentally decent and have a right to a fair shake, saw his moment and seized it—while recognizing all along that when it came to civil rights, the overcoming was a long way from over. “Johnson wanted his speech to reach you,” the author writes, and in earnest of that she closes with a cogent if abbreviated and lamentably behind-the-times epilogue on challenges to voting rights sparked by the Supreme Court’s 2013 Shelby v. Holder decision. The famously “tremendous” presidential ears are on display from infancy to last public appearance in a sparse assortment of photos. An early one depicts the White future president with the Mexican American students he taught in Cotulla, Texas.

A positive but not blindly adulatory introduction.

(timeline, bibliography, endnotes, activities) (Biography. 11-13)