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GRACE LEE BOGGS by Songju Ma Daemicke

GRACE LEE BOGGS

Gardens of Hope

by Songju Ma Daemicke ; illustrated by Lin

Pub Date: March 6th, 2025
ISBN: 9780807530122
Publisher: Whitman

A stimulating overview of the Chinese American social and civil rights activist’s long career and achievements.

Daemicke links a teacher’s childhood gift of The Secret Garden to the community gardens that Grace Lee Boggs (1915-2015) later planted in empty lots around Detroit with the aid of young volunteers. The author characterizes her subject as “a gardener not only of plants but also of minds.” Lin echoes that theme in emblematic tableaux that follow Boggs through early troubles finding work “because she was Chinese” and leadership of the Workers Party to grassroots initiatives like the “Detroit Summer” program. She had such close associations with Malcolm X and the Black Power Movement that her FBI file wrongly dubbed her “Afro-Chinese.” She spent decades involved in both local and larger causes and makes a final appearance here speaking to a diverse circle of youthful “solutionaries” (as she called them) about “art, the earth, and change, challenging them to turn ideas into action.” Daemicke brings home the reality that the struggle for civil rights, particularly for Asian Americans, has been long and tragic with a quick closing reference to Vincent Chin, victim of a hate crime in 1982. The narrative ends with hopes of making the world a “healthier, kinder, and more just place for everyone.”

An inspiring tale of a life dedicated to making better people in a better world.

(author’s note, timeline) (Picture-book biography. 7-9)