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Cut & Paste: Children's book authors want kids to know Rosa Parks 'wasn't the end of the story'

This is a portion of the cover of the new "Standing Up for Civil Rights" book for children.
Provided | Missouri History Museum
This is a portion of the cover of the new "Standing Up for Civil Rights" book for children.

How do you condense more than 150 years of civil rights history in to a single book — and make it understandable and meaningful to a fifth grader?

St. Louisan Amanda Doyle and co-author Melanie Adams recently attempted to do just that, for their children's book,  It starts in the 1800s with the stories of people who were enslaved, and ends with the 2014 shooting death of Michael Brown and the subsequent protests in Ferguson. But its message looks to the future, asking kids what they can do to change enduring problems facing African-Americans.

“Kids need to know that when Rosa Park sat down on the bus, that wasn’t the end of the story," Doyle said.

In our latest , we talk with Doyle and Adams about creating the book in connection with the Missouri History Museum's exhibition, and what they learned in the process.

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Nancy is a veteran journalist whose career spans television, radio, print and online media. Her passions include the arts and social justice, and she particularly delights in the stories of people living and working in that intersection.