Kadir Nelson's paintings have been exhibited in many galleries and museums around the world, including the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the Museum of Tolerance, and the Academy of Motion Pictures and Sciences in Los Angeles; the Museum of African American History in Detroit; the Smithsonian Anacostia Museum in Washington D.C.; and the Society of Illustrators and the Studio Museum in Harlem in New York, as well as many others.Nelson is the illustrator of many books for children. Among the best known are Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom by Carole Boston Weatherford, an NAACP Image Award winner, a Caldecott Honor Book, and a Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award winner; Ellington Was Not a Street by Ntozake Shange, a Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award winner; Please, Baby, Please and Please, Puppy, Please, by Spike Lee and Tonya Lewis Lee; and Will Smith's Just the Two of Us, also an NAACP Image Award winner. We Are the Ship is the first book Nelson has written and illustrated.Kadir Nelson lives with his family in California. Visit his Web site, www.kadirnelson.com.
"Adopting the perspective and voice of an elderly ballplayer,
[Nelson] offers a readable account that is infused with an air of
nostalgic oral history....Nelson's brilliant, almost iconic
paintings vividly complement his account.... An engaging tribute
that should resonate with a wide audience and delight baseball fans
of all ages."--School Library Journal
"Easygoing, conversational storytelling is exactly what Kadir
Nelson achieves in this pitch-perfect history of Negro League
Baseball....His grand slam, though, is the art: Nelson's oil
paintings have a steely dignity, and his from-the-ground
perspectives make the players look larger than life."--The Horn
Book
"Nelson continues to top himself with each new book...Along with
being absolutely riveted by the art, readers will come away with a
good picture of the Negro Leaguers' distinctive style of play, as
well as an idea of how their excellence challenged the racial
attitudes of both their sport and their times."--Kirkus Reviews
"The stories and artwork contained here are a tribute to the spirit
of the Negro Leaguers who created much more than an also-ran and
deserve a more prominent place on baseball's history shelves. For
students and fans (and those even older than the suggested grade
level), this is the book to accomplish just that."--Booklist
"Through text and artwork that pulses with life, Nelson has created
a book that brings personality to the Negro Baseball League... One
need not be a baseball fan to enjoy this book, because it's more
than a sports story. It's a story of real people enduring more than
many of us can imagine, playing a game they love."--Library Media
Connection
"Adopting the perspective and voice of an elderly ballplayer,
[Nelson] offers a readable account that is infused with an air of
nostalgic oral history....Nelson's brilliant, almost iconic
paintings vividly complement his account.... An engaging tribute
that should resonate with a wide audience and delight baseball fans
of all ages."--School Library Journal
"Easygoing, conversational storytelling is exactly what Kadir
Nelson achieves in this pitch-perfect history of Negro League
Baseball....His grand slam, though, is the art: Nelson's oil
paintings have a steely dignity, and his from-the-ground
perspectives make the players look larger than life."--The Horn
Book
"Nelson continues to top himself with each new book...Along with
being absolutely riveted by the art, readers will come away with a
good picture of the Negro Leaguers' distinctive style of play, as
well as an idea of how their excellence challenged the racial
attitudes of both their sport and their times."--Kirkus Reviews
"The stories and artwork contained here are a tribute to the spirit
of the Negro Leaguers who created much more than an also-ran and
deserve a more prominent place on baseball's history shelves. For
students and fans (and those even older than the suggested grade
level), this is the book to accomplish just that."--Booklist
"Through text and artwork that pulses with life, Nelson has created
a book that brings personality to the Negro Baseball League... One
need not be a baseball fan to enjoy this book, because it's more
than a sports story. It's a story of real people enduring more than
many of us can imagine, playing a game they love."--Library Media
Connection
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