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Marilyn Nelson
In 1955, people all over the United States knew that Emmett Louis Till was a fourteen-year-old African American boy lynched for supposedly whistling at a white woman in Mississippi. The brutality of his murder, the open-casket funeral, and the acquittal of the men tried for the crime drew wide media attention. Award-winning poet Marilyn Nelson reminds us of the boy whose fate helped spark the civil rights movement. This martyr’s wreath, woven from a little-known but sophisticated form of poetry, challenges us to speak out against modern-day injustices, to “speak what we see.”
| Publisher | HMH Books for Young Readers, Houghton Mifflin |
|---|---|
| Pages | 34 |
| Format | Hardcover |
| Search language | english |
| ISBN_10 | 0-618-39752-3 primary |
| ISBN_13 | 978-0-618-39752-5 primary |
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