Standing Against Hate: How Black Women in the Army Helped
Change the Course of WWII by Mary Cronk Farrell, 196 pages. NON-FICTION
Abrams Books, 2019. $18.
Content: Language: PG (1 swear); Mature
Content: G; Violence: PG-13.
BUYING
ADVISORY: MS, HS – ADVISABLE
AUDIENCE
APPEAL: AVERAGE
This non-fiction book
concentrates on the African American women who joined the Women’s Army Auxiliary
Corps (WAAC) during World War II.
Similar to the prejudice and discrimination that African American men
suffered, the women in this book enlisted to help the United States win the war
against oppression from Hitler but suffered from the oppression in their own
country. Charity Adams was one of the main people highlighted throughout the
book and she led her battalion as they sorted packages in England that were
backlogged and not reaching the troops.
Adams ran a tight system that enabled troops to receive their mail and
showed the Army that African American women were as capable as the rest of the
Army.
I loved the women in this book, and
they were courageous and unstoppable.
It’s not easy to read about the poor treatment and discrimination
suffered by African American women and the violence includes police
brutality. There are historical
photographs which make the story easy to visualize. This is a great perspective to add to your Black
History or World War II collections.
Reviewer, C. Peterson
1 comment:
Thanks so much for reviewing Standing Up Against Hate!
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