A Coretta Scott King Award winner and a Pura Belpré Illustrator Honor
winner pair up for a rousing picture book biography-in-verse of
legendary African American cyclist Marshall "Major" Taylor and the
Six-Day Race.
One hundred years ago, one of the most popular spectator sports was
bicycle racing, and the man to beat was Marshall "Major" Taylor, who set
records in his teens and won his first world championship by age twenty.
The first African American world champion in cycling and the second
Black athlete to win a world championship in any sport, Major Taylor
faced down challenge after challenge, not least the grueling Six-Day
Race, a test of speed, strength, and endurance. With energy, heart, and
pounding verse, Charles R. Smith Jr. evokes the excitement of the crowd
at Madison Square Garden as Major powered through exhaustion,
hallucinations, and racist abuse from fellow riders, who tried to crash
his bike throughout the competition. Leo Espinosa's dynamic
illustrations capture the action, and as day six draws to a close, and
Major's odds narrow, there is little doubt that his triumphant rise and
legacy as an international cycling champion are assured--whatever the
outcome of one race--in this high-octane tribute to a trailblazing
athlete.