Althea Gibson
The Story of Tennis' Fleet-of-foot Girl
New York, York : Balzar + Bray, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, [2020]
Format: Book
Edition: First edition.
Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
Althea Gibson was the quickest, tallest, most fearless athlete in 1940s Harlem. She couldn't sit still! When she put her mind to it, the fleet-of-foot girl reigned supreme at every sport--stickball with the boys, basketball with the girls, paddle tennis with anyone who would hit with her. But being the quickest, tallest, most fearless player in Harlem wasn't enough for Althea. She knew she could be a tennis champion. Because of segregation, black people weren't allowed to compete against white people in sports. Althea didn't care. She just wanted to play tennis against the best athletes in the world. And with skill and determination, she did just that, eventually becoming the first black person--man or woman--to win a trophy at Wimbledon.
Subjects:
Gibson, Althea, 1927-2003 -- Juvenile literature.
African American women tennis players -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Women tennis players -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Tennis players -- Juvenile literature.
African American women -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
African Americans -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Women -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Gibson, Althea, 1927-2003 -- Juvenile literature.
African American women tennis players -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Women tennis players -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Tennis players -- Juvenile literature.
African American women -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
African Americans -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Women -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
ISBN:
9780062851093
Availability | |||
---|---|---|---|
Call Number | Location | Shelf Location | Status |
C BIOGRAPHY Gibson, Althea | North Main | Children's Biography | Out (Due: 6/20/2024) |
C BIOGRAPHY Gibson, Althea | Sandhills Indoors | Children's Biography | In |
Includes bibliographical references (page [34]).