¡Mambo Mucho Mambo! the Dance That Crossed Color Lines

(Author) (Illustrator)
Available
Product Details
Price
$17.99  $16.73
Publisher
Candlewick Press (MA)
Publish Date
Pages
40
Dimensions
10.0 X 11.5 X 0.5 inches | 1.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781536206081

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About the Author
Dean Robbins is the author of Margaret and the Moon: How Margaret Hamilton Saved the First Lunar Landing; Miss Paul and the President: The Creative Campaign for Women's Right to Vote; and Two Friends: Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglass, and a lifelong student of jazz. Dean Robbins lives in Madison, Wisconsin.

Eric Velasquez is the award-winning illustrator of Schomburg: The Man Who Built a Library, which received a Walter Dean Myers Award and an SCBWI Golden Kite Award. He has also won a John Steptoe New Talent Illustrator Award and a Pura Belpré Illustrator Award. Eric Velasquez lives in Hartsdale, New York.
Reviews
Robbins's snappy language and smoking turn of phrase brings the mambo and all its followers to life. Lázaro's Spanish translation sizzles. . . . Velasquez's illustrations send sparks flying off each full-bleed spread. . . . Fiery and rhythmic storytelling surges to the beat of the conga--a ­must-have selection for all ages.
--School Library Journal (starred review)

Robbins's prose is as musical as his subject. . . Velasquez's characteristic, near-photorealistic illustrations, rendered in oil paint in a palette reflecting the time, add a dynamic fluidity to the historical atmosphere of this enlightening narrative nonfiction title.
--Publishers Weekly

Dynamic text goes hand in hand with vibrant, motion-filled illustrations to tell the story of the Latin sound that swept through New York and then the country in the 1940s and '50s. . . . Exuberant, just like the dance.
--Kirkus Reviews

In Robbins and Velasquez's hands, this early challenge to segregation makes for a lively, compelling piece of history.
--The Horn Book

Robbins and illustrator Velasquez capture the mambo craze of the late 1940s and early 1950s, when New York's Palladium Ballroom disregarded color lines and welcomed people of different races dancing together.
--The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel