In this book, a bus does talk, and on her way to school a girl named Marcie learns why Rosa Parks is the mother of the civil rights movement.
Marcie learns all this and more then gets a special surprise at the end of her trip!.
But when the day came that Rosa refused to give up her seat, she helped set the wheels in motion for black people to sit where they wanted.
Because she was black, Rosa had to walk miles to a one-room schoolhouse while white children Could take the bus, and as an adult, Rosa Could only sit in the back.
A young girl named Marcie has a magical bus ride where the bus itself tells her the Story of the mother of the Civil Rights Movement, Rosa Parks.
From a Caldecott Honor Award and Coretta Scott King Award-winning illustrator comes a bright and offbeat picture book with a unique perspective on the Story of Rosa Parks.
At the end of Marcie\'s magical ride, she meets Rosa Parks herself at a birthday party with several distinguished guests.
In this book, a bus does talk, and on her way to school a girl named Marcie learns why Rosa Parks is the mother of the civil rights movement