April 08, 2026

The Man In Motion: How Rick Hansen's World Tour Helped Break Down Barriers for People with Disabilities

Written by Lorna Schultz Nicholson with Rick Hansen
Illustrated by Emma Fitzgerald
Owlkids Books
978-1-77147-677-5
40 pp.
Ages 5–8
April 2026 
 
While people of my generation will remember Rick Hansen and his World Tour, many younger readers will know little of this extraordinary Canadian and his determination to help the world become more accessible for persons with disabilities. Now, Lorna Schultz Nicholson with Rick Hansen are bringing his story to inform young readers of his heroic accomplishments. 
From The Man In Motion: How Rick Hansen's World Tour Helped Break Down Barriers for People with Disabilities, written by Lorna Schultz Nicholson with Rick Hansen, illustrated by Emma Fitzgerald
Rick Hansen's story is told from his accident at age 15 when he'd broken his back and required use of a wheelchair. But in the 1970s, many buildings lacked accessibility features like ramps. Moreover, Rick noticed that people treated him differently, now seeing "his chair without seeing him." (pg. 5) Though he'd won wheelchair marathons and Paralympic events, he wanted to do more. With the help of some friends, he planned the Man In Motion World Tour with the aim of travelling by wheelchair over four continents to thirty-four countries. He set out on March 21, 1985 with his team.
From The Man In Motion: How Rick Hansen's World Tour Helped Break Down Barriers for People with Disabilities, written by Lorna Schultz Nicholson with Rick Hansen, illustrated by Emma Fitzgerald
From the onset, the road was long and challenging, and Rick faced potential setbacks like a smashed spare wheelchair, as well as inclement weather. Getting media attention and donations was arduous. But Rick and his team continued pushing through the United States, and then into Europe, Asia, and Oceania. He visited numerous countries, saw wondrous things, and often wondered if he'd done enough. 
From The Man In Motion: How Rick Hansen's World Tour Helped Break Down Barriers for People with Disabilities, written by Lorna Schultz Nicholson with Rick Hansen, illustrated by Emma Fitzgerald
Rick had been on his World Tour for over a year when he returned to North America. After being interviewed on The Today Show, more people became aware of Rick and the Tour. Finally, Rick had become famous enough to bring attention and get donations to support his tour and spinal cord research.
 
His final section of the Tour was across Canada, and he was given a hero's welcome everywhere. When his journey ended on May 22, 1987, he'd "raised $26 million and showed the world that people with disabilities have extraordinary potential." (pg. 35)
From The Man In Motion: How Rick Hansen's World Tour Helped Break Down Barriers for People with Disabilities, written by Lorna Schultz Nicholson with Rick Hansen, illustrated by Emma Fitzgerald
Lorna Schultz Nicholson gives us the hero of Rick Hansen without minimizing the struggles he faced on his tour. Her text, as well as a "Fun Facts" section, a summary of his story, and a note from Rick, remind us of the extraordinary efforts required to complete the Man In Motion World Tour. (For example, Rick travelled 40,075 km, wore out 160 tires, and burned through 94 pairs of gloves.) This is a story of the extraordinary by an extraordinary person, and Lorna Schultz Nicholson emphasizes this always. And she does it with a quiet fascination and casual storytelling that may make the reader forget that this is non-fiction. It's an amazing story and she tells it very well.
 
Emma Fitzgerald's pen and ink illustrations, later coloured digitally, give incredible detail to the story, whether it's the textures of a forest, the busyness of a street scene, or the toil of harsh weather. This Nova Scotia artist delivers the vastness of Rick Hansen's tour, from people and place to weather and hassles. And even though there is little detail in Rick and others, there is enough to see joy, apprehension, warmth, and even muscle-building. 

Forty years ago, Rick Hansen was in the middle of his Man In Motion World Tour. His aspiration to bring awareness to persons with disabilities, and the need for accessibility and spinal cord research was fulfilled but not finished. Even his "Note from Rick" invites young readers to think more deeply about persons with disabilities and about accessibility issues so that they too might help make a difference. By asking them to think about his story and those of other persons with disabilities, Lorna Schultz Nicholson and Rick Hansen have taken his story from one of then to one of now and into one of potential action. 

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