Miss Mary Reporting: The True Story of Sportswriter Mary
Garber
Written by Sue Macy and Illustrated by C.F. Payne
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2016
Ages: 5-8
“Miss Mary Reporting: The True Story of Sportswriter Mary
Garber” is a wonderful picture book biography: well written, engaging and
inspiring in its subject. It is the story of Mary Garber, one of the first
American female sports reporters.
Mary grew up in the 1920s and ‘30s, first in New Jersey and
then in Winston-Salem, N.C. Even though she was a tiny girl, she always loved
sports: playing football with the boys, going to football games with her dad
and sister, and following boxing, baseball and football in the newspaper.
She graduated from Hollins College, a women’s school in
Roanoke, Va., with a degree in philosophy. Then she struggled to find a job as
a newspaper reporter, and finally took a post as a society reporter for the Twin City Sentinel, a paper in
Winston-Salem. Reporting on the fashionable dresses rich people wore to social
events didn’t interest her though.
Mary got her break during World War II when many young men
joined the armed forces, leaving women to take over jobs on the home
front. After the Sentinel’s last sportswriter joined the navy in 1944, the editor
assigned Mary to cover sports.
She continued to
write about sports for the Twin City
Sentinel, and then its sister paper the Winston-Salem
Journal after the Sentinel went
out of business in 1985, until she was 86 in 2002, though she officially
retired in 1986.
As one of the first woman sports reporters, Mary faced many
obstacles, especially in the beginning. In the 1940s, women weren’t allowed to
sit in the press box at college games. She had to sit with the coaches’ wives
until her editor complained. As a woman, she also wasn’t allowed in the locker
room.
When the male reporters interviewed players as they changed into their
street clothes, she had to wait outside. It was hard for her to get quotes from
the players because they were eager to get home after they left the locker room.
She wrote about Jackie Robinson, who played for the Dodgers
as the first black player in major league baseball since the 1880s. Robinson
became a role model for her. She felt inspired by how he maintained a quiet
dignity despite taunts and jeers from people who couldn’t accept a black man in
the major leagues.
Mary’s color blindness came out in her decision to begin
covering games at Winston-Salem’s all black schools. At that time, many schools
in the South were segregated, with white children attending all-white schools
and black children attending all-black schools. When Mary began writing for the
sports pages, the Sentinel rarely
covered games at the black schools. Mary changed that.
Mary won many awards for her reporting and was voted into sportswriters’
halls of fame. But she said the greatest compliment she ever got happened when
she was covering the Soap Box Derby in Winston-Salem. A friend of hers overheard
a conversation between two eight- and ten-year-old African-American boys. The older boy pointed to Mary and said, “Do you
see that lady down there on the field?” The other boy nodded.
“That’s Miss Mary Garber. And she doesn’t care who you are,
or where you’re from, or what you are. If you do something, she’s going to
write about you.”
As strong as this book is editorially, it is equally
powerful visually. The mixed media illustrations by C.F. Payne compliment the
story perfectly. They fill the pages
with character and movement, and are well composed for dramatic effect.
With its clear writing, nice use of quotations, and
inspiring story, coupled with outstanding artwork, this picture book biography
is strongly recommended.
About the Author and
Illustrator:
Sue Macy enjoys
writing about sports for children. Her latest picture book, “Roller Derby
Rivals,” was a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year and was called “a slam bang
offering” by Betsy Bird, who writes the blog, “A Fuse 8 Production,” for School
Library Journal. Her previous picture book, “Basketball Belles,” was a Booklist
Editors’ Choice for 2011. Before turning to full-time writing, Sue was an
editor and editorial director at Scholastic. She lives in Englewood, N.J., and
her website is suemacy.com.
C.F. Payne is the
illustrator of the #1 New York Times bestseller “Mousetronaut” by Mark Kelly
and “Mighty Jackie: The Strike-Out Queen” by Ernest Lawrence Thayer, which earned
a starred review from Publishers Weekly. He has received great acclaim for his
work, including awards from the Society of Illustrators in New York and Los
Angeles. C.F. is a professor of distinction in the illustration department at
Columbus College of Art and Design. He lives with his family in Lebanon, Ohio,
and his website is cfpayne.com.