

It is unflinching in its depiction of the rage and brutality of the racist opposition Lewis encounters the second volume features a particularly memorable scene where a little blond boy grins and curls his fingers like claws while an adult voice booms from above, “That’s my boy.

On every page of every volume, March insists on nonviolence in the face of violence and oppression. It was his experience with this comic, Lewis says, that led him to agree to write his own story as a graphic novel when Aydin approached him with the idea - and he hopes that March, like The Montgomery Story, will teach a new generation about the power of nonviolent protest. Participants studied a comic book called Martin Luther King and the Montgomery Story, which outlines King’s strategy of nonviolent action as a tool for desegregation. “We needed to see how each of us would react under stress.”īut the workshops also used gentler tactics. “We tried to dehumanize each other,” says the caption. In March, the workshops look harrowing: Participants alternate screaming racial slurs and threats at one another, their shadowy faces dominating the panels of each page as spittle flies from their mouths. Lewis went to college in Nashville, where he began to attend Jim Lawson’s workshops on nonviolent protest. In book one, set in the 1950s, we meet young Lewis, the son of share-croppers, dreaming of preaching the social gospel like Martin Luther King and practicing baptisms on his parents’ chickens. March chronicles Lewis’s long history in the civil rights movement, detailing how he became one of its so-called Big Six leaders. Books one and two were released in 20, and the third volume came out this August.

March is a series of graphic memoirs written by Lewis and his staffer Andrew Aydin, illustrated by the award-winning graphic artist Nate Powell. To prove it, you don’t have to look any further than his books. “Sad!”īut Lewis achieved monumental results over his career, both in government and as a civil rights protester. “All talk, talk, talk - no action or results,” Trump wrote of Lewis, after Lewis said that he did not consider Trump to be a legitimate president. holiday weekend, President-elect Donald Trump started a Twitter war with civil rights hero and Congress member John Lewis.
