PHILADELPHIA (AP) The comic book used to teach and inspire U.S. civil rights proponents and activists in the 1950s and 1960s is being released digitally amid increased interest in its role in the movement.
Top Shelf Comix said Wednesday that "Martin Luther King and The Montgomery Story" was scanned using the original files from the 16-page comic first published in 1958 by the Nyack, New York.-Fellowship of Reconciliation. It's being sold digitally through Comixology, as well as through Amazon for the Kindle, in Apple's iBookstore and on other platforms.
Its influence was noted by U.S. Rep. John Lewis who said reading it helped galvanize his involvement.
"It was very inspiring ... and when I attended the nonviolence workshops in Nashville at a local church, we all had an opportunity to get a copy of this book we called the 'comic book,'" he told The Associated Press in August. "We were able to digest the essence of the book as we studied and participated in those nonviolence workshops."
Andrew Aydin, who co-wrote Lewis' graphic novel autobiography "March: Book One," said the comic was used in FOR-run workshops and recalled its impetus ahead of protests in Greensboro, North Carolina, in February 1960.