cover image Call Me Miss Hamilton: One Woman’s Case for Equality and Respect

Call Me Miss Hamilton: One Woman’s Case for Equality and Respect

Carole Boston Weatherford, illus. by Jeffery Boston Weatherford. Millbrook, $19.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-5415-6040-6

In this stirring profile, the mother-son author-illustrator team center Mary Lucille Hamilton (1935–2002), a Black civil rights activist and educator whose 1964 Supreme Court case, Hamilton v. Alabama, ensured that people of color would be addressed by courtesy titles and last names in court, like their white counterparts. Carole Boston Weatherford provides unflinching narration of Hamilton’s “fiery spirit” and nonviolent resistance: “Mary had news for that judge. She was not afraid to fight in court for what’s right. With NAACP lawyers on her side, she fought the contempt charge all the way to the United States Supreme Court.” Collages made of photographs and fine-lined sketches on scratchboard by Jeffery Boston Weatherford, combined with boldly graphical book design, give the picture book a cinematic quality, placing due emphasis on Miss Hamilton’s landmark case. Back matter features a note on names, a timeline with photographs, and further reading. Ages 7–11. (Feb.)