Time for me to review the two books, both of which were drawn very well.
Jackie Robinson #1
This brief, and early biography of Jackie, lasts only until the middle of his 3rd season playing U.S. Major League
Baseball, and so, is heavy on his sports career, and misses all his civic and humanitarian work of his post sports careers and life. Also, it includes a lot of sports statistics that would probably be uninteresting to non-baseball fans, and especially to non-Americans.
What I find most notable is the absence of the bitter hatred so many Americans had for African Americans (especially Southerners, but certainly not exclusively so). In northern US. cities (of which ALL The Major League cities were), Jackie was spat upon, pelted by beer bottles, screamed at with curses and death threats by opposing teams' fans, jumped on and beat by opposing teams' players, opposing teams, like The Philadelphia Phillies and Pittsburgh Pirates refused to play in games if The Dodgers would play Jackie, some of his own Dodger teammates refused to play for the team if they assigned Jackie to play for their organisation's top team, Brooklyn.They were traded. The most important of these was former National League batting champion, Fred "Dixie" Walker, who was promptly traded away to The Pittsburgh team, the day after he made that statement.
I understand that Fawcett Publications had to be careful not to anger the parents of too many potential readers, by pointing out (towards) the ugliness of the rampant racism in USA (even in that nation's northern states) as it might be considered too political (and un-American) to make the country look "bad". So, Fawcett's editors put as little in on that subject, as possible. The major part of the story is that Robinson had to live through "Hell" to make way for the opening up of opportunities for other African-Americans to finally be allowed to start competing for opportunities to make better lives for their families (albeit that they still, to this day, don't compete on a fair and equal basis for those chances). The proof of that incredible pressure he was under for many years, was his early aging, and early death at the young age of 56 from long deadly illnesses.
Joe Louis #2
This, being Book Number 2 of Fawcett's 7-book series on Joe Louis, differs from Fawcett's Jackie Robinson's one-book biography, in that it starts with Joe already being World Champion of boxing, and, thus, a World famous celebrity. But, the two stories of Robinson and Louis are similar in that both men took on the hopes and dreams of their people's dreams for fair treatment (equality) in their own country. Joe Louis, being before Jackie Robinson's breakthrough into the formerly segregated top levels of his sport (baseball), in a country segregated not only by law in its southern states, but de facto in its other states through the underlying racial hatred infiltrating most aspects of daily life, was the great hope of African Americans to show to The World that they were just as capable as so-called "Caucasians". So, Joe was carrying a lot of "responsibility" on his shoulders, as well. By beating Adolf Hitler's German (so-called "Aryan") boxing champion, he could prove that people with roots from Africa who were denigrated as an inferior race by Hitler and his Nazis, were better at something than the so-called "Master Race".
I liked the "Victory For Jimmy" story, extolling the usefulness of learning "the manly art of boxing", and the moral and practical lesson of standing up to bullies. I also liked the brief one-page biography of mid-to-late 1920s World Heavyweight Champion, Gene Tunney.