c.2019, Versify
$17.99 (higher in Canada)
40 pages
You wanted it. And you wanted it very much.
But, uh, well, you didnโt get it. You worked and you begged and maybe you even saved but you didnโt get what it was that you wanted. You were sad, but you got over it. Youโll try again, work harder, save more and, as in โThe Undefeatedโ by Kwame Alexander and Kadir Nelson, one day, youโll reach your goal.
This book is just for you. But itโs something you have to share because itโs โfor the unforgettable,โ too. Itโs for those people who opened the doors to all kinds of new opportunities for everyone, but they never became famous for it.
Itโs for people who did whatever it took to get to America, to thrive and find a home and happiness. This book is for people who struggled, and for those who didnโt.
Itโs about people who were strong and were admired for that strength. Itโs for those who believed in themselves but who also put their faith in a higher power. Itโs for those who โtackle visionโ and those who donโt hide their light behind anything, ever.
Itโs for soldiers and dancers, marchers and players, boxers and parents and kids, and itโs for you. Itโs for Black lives that matter and for the people who never got a chance to know that. Itโs because of the โunspeakable.โ
Share this book for those who wonโt be stopped, whoโll keep dreaming and reaching and imagining and proving. Itโs for the athletes we know, and for the ones we donโt know about yet. Itโs for performers we sing along with, and for songs not written. Itโs for those who tried and tried until the last breath they had.
Youโll have to share it, but this book is for you. Itโs โfor us.โ
โThe Undefeatedโ is one of those things thatโs really had to nail down.
Itโs a quick read that may be too quick for some kids; itโs over almost before it begins because author Kwame Alexanderโs words are spare and not very attention-grabbing for the very youngest of children. It doesnโt help that the picture-book-style illustrations are attractive but they arenโt particularly colorful or active.
For grade-schoolers, none of that will matter because โThe Undefeatedโ is a poem set to picture and itโs inspirational for them, especially if theyโre just learning about African-American history. But thereโs a possibility for those kids that the power behind the illustrations by Kadir Nelson might be missed because the stories of the people in this book are at the end and not always with the pictures.
Adults, however, might find this book to be a treasure. Alexanderโs poem pulses with strength and the artwork, from an adultโs POV, is perfectly rendered. You may recognize the people depicted โ and if not, thereโs always the back of the book.
The trick, perhaps, is to carefully share this book with the child you love, explain it and let it spark conversation. Once kids understand, โThe Undefeatedโ is a book theyโll want very much.

