About this Event
Little Shop of Stories is so incredibly excited and honored to welcome Yvonne Clark-Rhines and Monica Clark-Robinson to Decatur to read and discuss their book, Teaching for Change: How Septima Clark Led the Civil Rights Movement to Voting Justice! Be sure to save your spot for what is sure to be a very special storytime and author talk! Read below for more details:
Tickets:
Admission: $0 this free ticket admits one to our event
Admission + Book: $19.99 this ticket admits one to our event and includes a copy of Teaching for Change to be picked up and signed at the event
About the Book:
Septima Clark was born poor, Black, and a girl. Being one of those things in 1898 was hard, but all three meant that access to education was going to be a fight. But with strong, hard-working women in her life, a determination to learn, and a passion for knowledge, Septima learned to read and write against all odds.
With stunning art by debut illustrator Abigail Albano-Payton, this lyrical biography charts the monumental life of one tenacious woman—once referred to as The Mother of the Civil Rights Movement by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.—who made it her mission to bring equity to literacy. Thanks to her efforts, the Black community was able to rise up against oppressive Jim Crow laws that tried to stifle their votes.
Septima persevered through adversity, discrimination, and even wrongful arrests to ensure that the road to liberation remained open for all people. This story is a testament to the power and importance of community-minded action.
About the Authors:
Yvonne Clark-Rhines is the granddaughter of the legendary civil rights leader Septima Poinsette Clark. Raised by her beloved Mama Seppie from the age of four, she spent her early years at the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee, before moving to Charleston, South Carolina. As a teenager, Yvonne became an active participant in the civil rights movement, marching alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), as well as the local community in support of the Charleston Hospital strike, which demanded fair treatment for African American hospital workers. Inspired by her grandmother’s legacy, Yvonne dedicated over a decade of her life to working with the SCLC.
Yvonne later spent nearly three decades as a director of marketing and compliance for Medicare Health Plans. She now resides in Georgia with her family.
Monica Clark-Robinson is passionate about stories—writing them, acting them out onstage, and reading them. She believes that learning the stories of our past can help us build the story for our future. She is the author of Let the Children March, a Coretta Scott King Honor Book for Illustration and a Kirkus Best Book, and Standing on Her Shoulders, a Junior Library Guild Gold Choice. She lives in Little Rock, Arkansas, with her family.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Little Shop of Stories, 133 East Court Square, Decatur, United States
USD 0.00 to USD 23.74












