While I was researching for a picture book manuscript, I discovered on YouTube, the author of a John Henry (folk legend) book I'd already read, Scott Reynolds Nelson, being interviewed by the person who is the narrator of the audio book version, Panama Jackson. It was curious discovery, and when I saw the delight with which Scott Reynolds Nelson received questions and comments from Panama Jackson, I was moved to listen to (instead of read) Steel Drivin' Man.
MAN, this book goes deep. I'm now a believer that JH was a real person, not just a legend, and a doomed Jersey-born straight-talkin' powerhouse. I particularly appreciated how Reynolds illustrates history repeating itself, straight to today with how Black men are consistently locked away from the rest of society for so-described wrongs done (including men in my family) and then put to work, behind bars, largely out-of-sight, intended to be forgotten.
Unlike when I read Reynold's Ain't Nothing But A Man, a more simplified take for young readers, which focuses on the process of conducting research, Steel Drivin' Man launched me into a deep Wiki-hole of reading about the folk legends of my childhood (and earlier), like Pete Seeger, Odetta, Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly, and others who have sung the historical blues-folk-country-bluegrass-rock'n'roll tune: The Ballad of John Henry. So much to think on here, and I'm grateful for Nelson's dedication to the topic.