![]() ![]() Strange Birds: A Field Guide to Ruffling Feathersīillie Jean! How Tennis Star Billie Jean King Changed Women’s Sports My Body My Choice: The Fight for Abortion Rights And best of all, these books are fun reading! All of them spur the imagination and expand the limits of dreams while confronting traditional female stereotypes. From a picture book using bear hair and other earthen materials in its illustrations to a biography written in graphic-novel format, these books show girls and women exploring exciting ways to solve practical dilemmas through the courage of their convictions. Others feature girls who outwit dragons, create petroglyphs to save a tribe, and train to win battles. They introduce children growing up in the South during the Civil Rights Movement, photographers on the cutting edge of their times, young women surviving in today’s Afghanistan, and pioneers in the fields of flyinig and space exploration. Set from prehistoric times to the present, these books, both fiction and nonfiction, provide role models of stong, capable, creative women. Books eligible for this award must have been published in the United States during the 18 months prior to the selection in January of each year. In the spirit of Amelia Bloomer, the Feminist Task Force of the Social Responsibilities Round Table of the American Library Association proudly announced in 2002 the first annual Amelia Bloomer List, a bibliography of appealing feminist books for young readers from birth to 18. Published in 2000, YOU FORGOT YOUR SKIRT, AMELIA BLOOMER! uses humor and history to bring the life and work of this pioneering newspaper editor, feminist thinker, public speaker, and suffragist to a new generation. A few years ago, a book by Shana Carey introduced nineteenth-century feminist activist Amelia Bloomer to the picture-book crowd. ![]()
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