Our America: Life and Death on the South Side of Chicago by LeAlan Jones and Lloyd Newman, with David Isay
New York : Washington Square Press : Pocket Books, c1997.
203 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
This book is one that is being used as a major text in classes at our high school - part of an "Injustice Project" unit. I wanted to read it since I wondered if it might be dated - having been produced from 1993 - 1996 and published in 1997.
In spite of the book being 20+ years old, it was a compelling read. I really loved that the adult organizing the book, David Isay, wanted it to be the genuine work of young people who lived in the Ida B. Wells housing projects in Chicago. The book came out of an award winning WBEZ radio program Ghetto Life 101 which featured recordings and interviews made by the two young authors who were 13 and 14 years old when the project began.
I will be curious how students respond to the book. A lot has changed since the mid 90s: the high rise projects of the book have been torn down, the crack/cocaine violence has been replaced by other inner city violence, the Internet was a baby, and cell phones did not exist. A lot is still relevant though - extreme poverty and unemployment falling heavily on Black people, gun crime, wealth inequality, etc. Also the book just pulls you into the world of the the two authors - they are smart, unpretentious, honest, and aware. Also the book features great photos by John Brooks, another young man living in the Chicago projects at the time.
I am going to keep my eyes out for something similar to this book, but one that is more contemporary - something like Bus 57. However, if asked for an interesting read about inner city life in the late 20th century, I'll definitely recommend Our America.
Showing posts with label 1990s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1990s. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
The 911 That Never Should Have Been
The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright
New York : Vintage Books, 2007.
540 p. : ill., maps ; 21 cm.
I've read a lot about the Middle East, and about 9/11, but The Looming Tower is one of the best books to pull all the narrative threads together into an informative, compelling and stunning read.
There were several things I learned that surprised me. I didn't realize how central the Egyptian fundamentalist-jihad movement was to al-Qaeda. I had no idea that Bin Laden's time in Sudan was marked by his arriving a multimillionaire and leaving virtually broke. I didn't know that when he left Sudan for Afghanistan, he had no idea who the Taliban were and they were cautious about him, too. Probably the most painful revelations of the book are the several times that the CIA refused to share information with the FBI which almost surely would have lead to the uncovering and thwarting of the 9/11 plot. There is more to discover in Wright's definitive history.
I would definitely recommend this book to a student with a keen interest in the background of 9/11 or to a student working on a research project about 9/11. It is a fine book, one which won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.
New York : Vintage Books, 2007.
540 p. : ill., maps ; 21 cm.
I've read a lot about the Middle East, and about 9/11, but The Looming Tower is one of the best books to pull all the narrative threads together into an informative, compelling and stunning read.
There were several things I learned that surprised me. I didn't realize how central the Egyptian fundamentalist-jihad movement was to al-Qaeda. I had no idea that Bin Laden's time in Sudan was marked by his arriving a multimillionaire and leaving virtually broke. I didn't know that when he left Sudan for Afghanistan, he had no idea who the Taliban were and they were cautious about him, too. Probably the most painful revelations of the book are the several times that the CIA refused to share information with the FBI which almost surely would have lead to the uncovering and thwarting of the 9/11 plot. There is more to discover in Wright's definitive history.
I would definitely recommend this book to a student with a keen interest in the background of 9/11 or to a student working on a research project about 9/11. It is a fine book, one which won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.
Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Money and Revenge
The Making of Donald Trump by David Cay Johnston
Brooklyn : Melville House, [2016]
xvi, 263 p. ; 24 cm.
I'm a pretty cynical person by nature, but this book is a very depressing summary of the life of Donald Trump, who is now President Donald Trump. David Cay Johnston is an investigative reporter who has been covering Trump since the late 1980s.
Probably what makes this book so stunning, is the unrelenting negatives that make up Trump's life. A reader hoping to find something redeeming in the actions of Donald Trump will come away with nothing. Instead what emerges is a person who is incredibly talented at skirting the edges of legality to make himself famous and - whether or not as wealthy as he claims - a conduit for the transactions of vast sums of loans, credits and money.
Sadly, what emerges is the portrait of a man who celebrates revenge and greed, and treats women as objects.
Johnston released his book in August of 2016, probably hoping that it would dissuade voters from supporting Trump. That, obviously, was not the case.
If a student is interested in a well researched, well documented accounting of the life of Donald Trump, this is a book to recommend. As for President Trump, we will have to wait several years at least, for a book that will provide an assessment of the life of President Trump and what the results of that will be.
Brooklyn : Melville House, [2016]
xvi, 263 p. ; 24 cm.
I'm a pretty cynical person by nature, but this book is a very depressing summary of the life of Donald Trump, who is now President Donald Trump. David Cay Johnston is an investigative reporter who has been covering Trump since the late 1980s.
Probably what makes this book so stunning, is the unrelenting negatives that make up Trump's life. A reader hoping to find something redeeming in the actions of Donald Trump will come away with nothing. Instead what emerges is a person who is incredibly talented at skirting the edges of legality to make himself famous and - whether or not as wealthy as he claims - a conduit for the transactions of vast sums of loans, credits and money.
Sadly, what emerges is the portrait of a man who celebrates revenge and greed, and treats women as objects.
Johnston released his book in August of 2016, probably hoping that it would dissuade voters from supporting Trump. That, obviously, was not the case.
If a student is interested in a well researched, well documented accounting of the life of Donald Trump, this is a book to recommend. As for President Trump, we will have to wait several years at least, for a book that will provide an assessment of the life of President Trump and what the results of that will be.
Friday, September 2, 2016
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander
New York : New Press, 2010.
xi, 290 p. ; 24 cm.
This is a book I've been wanting to read since it first came out in 2010. It received a lot of praise, and time has proven that the praise was not misplaced.
In the last couple of years - especially following the killings of Treyvon Martin and Michael Brown and the subsequent emergence of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement - the national debate on the injustices of law enforcement and the criminal justice system toward black people in the US has taken on a vibrant and expansive life. Reading The New Jim Crow during the summer of 2016, I couldn't help but wonder how amazed Michelle Alexander must feel about events that have occurred in the ten years since she published the book.
Her book is a thorough, well researched, and toughly argued case against the US criminal justice system - especially the mass incarceration of African Americans since the ramping up of the War on Drugs.
What makes her book especially powerful - in addition to its research data and passion for justice - is that it shows how the new mass incarceration of black people is simply a continuation of the historic pattern of racism in the US adapting to new social changes and traditions in order to reestablish the oppression of African Americans: first slavery, then after the Civil War and reconstruction comes Jim Crow, and after the Civil Rights movement and legal gains, comes the War on Drugs and the lopsided application of it against people of color.
It's a powerful book and still very timely. I'd recommend it to any student wanting to research or understand mass incarceration and institutional race
New York : New Press, 2010.
xi, 290 p. ; 24 cm.
This is a book I've been wanting to read since it first came out in 2010. It received a lot of praise, and time has proven that the praise was not misplaced.
In the last couple of years - especially following the killings of Treyvon Martin and Michael Brown and the subsequent emergence of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement - the national debate on the injustices of law enforcement and the criminal justice system toward black people in the US has taken on a vibrant and expansive life. Reading The New Jim Crow during the summer of 2016, I couldn't help but wonder how amazed Michelle Alexander must feel about events that have occurred in the ten years since she published the book.
Her book is a thorough, well researched, and toughly argued case against the US criminal justice system - especially the mass incarceration of African Americans since the ramping up of the War on Drugs.
What makes her book especially powerful - in addition to its research data and passion for justice - is that it shows how the new mass incarceration of black people is simply a continuation of the historic pattern of racism in the US adapting to new social changes and traditions in order to reestablish the oppression of African Americans: first slavery, then after the Civil War and reconstruction comes Jim Crow, and after the Civil Rights movement and legal gains, comes the War on Drugs and the lopsided application of it against people of color.
It's a powerful book and still very timely. I'd recommend it to any student wanting to research or understand mass incarceration and institutional race
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
A Terrible Time
All Involved by Ryan Gattis
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, 2016.
372 p. ; 21 cm.
Gattis' novel won an Alex Award this year, an award recognizing books published for adults which have a high appeal for young adult readers.
All Involved is a powerful read and the author's site for the book is a good place to go for links to some of the history behind the novel.
I can see why Gattis' book won an Alex Award, but I would definitely note that the content is very mature. Set in the lawless, violent days of the LA upheaval (riot? insurrection? uprising?) the novel is gritty, violent, vulgar and disturbing. However, it is hard to imagine a book about the LA Riots of 1992 that would be able to avoid some very upsetting and graphic episodes. What makes this novel exceptional its use of seventeen interconnected 1st person narratives that tell the story of six days of unrest that followed the acquittal of police officers unknowingly filmed as they savagely beat Rodney King nearly to death. In this novel we see gangs settling old scores, sweeping in innocent and not-so-innocent people with savage violence and betrayal. We also see the humanity of people working to save the injured, the dying and buildings that have been set ablaze.
I found this a compelling read, even if somewhat demoralizing. It is a book that would appeal to students who are interested in urban violence, gang life and extreme situations - think Rodriguez's Always Running or Reymundo Sanchez' Once a King - and, like those books, it is one that is for mature readers.
Monday, September 28, 2015
King Ick
King Dork by Frank Portman
New York : Delacorte Press, c2006.
344 p. ; 22 cm.
Some books work for me and some don't. This one just didn't, which surprised me since it received a lot of very positive reviews.
As someone who has been working in public schools for over a decade, I found what Booklist calls "a humorous, scathing indictment of the current public education system" to be instead a cynical, crass and deeply dishonest portrayal of public school life. The high school of Dorkworld is a vicious place where faculty gladly and frequently bully students, where bullying by students is completely accepted and condoned, and where the academics are non-existent. That would all be ok, if the intention of hte book was to create a exaggerated parody of public high schools. Additionally, the teachers in Dorkworld are a bunch of imbeciles, bullies, fools, and/or pornographic criminals - and the academic world they preside over is one where even the AP classes offer little more than inane fluff.
Finally, the main "hero" of Dorkworld is supposedly an unappealing outsider subject to bullying, ridicule and insults - but as the novel ends it becomes apparent that he's really as crass as any of the pathological normals that he hates, considers himself better than everyone else, and somehow ends up as the sensual boy-toy of two rather attractive girls.
The writing is pretty good. Dialogue is well done. But for me this book just lacks heart.
New York : Delacorte Press, c2006.
344 p. ; 22 cm.
Some books work for me and some don't. This one just didn't, which surprised me since it received a lot of very positive reviews.
As someone who has been working in public schools for over a decade, I found what Booklist calls "a humorous, scathing indictment of the current public education system" to be instead a cynical, crass and deeply dishonest portrayal of public school life. The high school of Dorkworld is a vicious place where faculty gladly and frequently bully students, where bullying by students is completely accepted and condoned, and where the academics are non-existent. That would all be ok, if the intention of hte book was to create a exaggerated parody of public high schools. Additionally, the teachers in Dorkworld are a bunch of imbeciles, bullies, fools, and/or pornographic criminals - and the academic world they preside over is one where even the AP classes offer little more than inane fluff.
Finally, the main "hero" of Dorkworld is supposedly an unappealing outsider subject to bullying, ridicule and insults - but as the novel ends it becomes apparent that he's really as crass as any of the pathological normals that he hates, considers himself better than everyone else, and somehow ends up as the sensual boy-toy of two rather attractive girls.
The writing is pretty good. Dialogue is well done. But for me this book just lacks heart.
Friday, May 8, 2015
Schooled in Prison
A Question of Freedom by R. Dwayne Betts
New York : Avery, 2010, c2009.
1st trade pbk. ed.
240 p. ; 21 cm.
There have been some really good books out lately about mass incarceration - such as The New Jim Crow and the comic book format, Race to Incarcerate. A Question of Freedom is a great addition to the literature - and especially for high school age readers - in that it personalizes the story in a compelling and finely written memoir by a young man who was sentenced as an adult to 9 years in prison at the age of 16.
Yes, he committed a serious crime - using a gun to carjack a man in a mall parking lot. And yet under the relatively new draconian laws now on the books in many states, he was sentenced a a sixteen year old to serve years in adult penitentiaries in the state of Virginia.
In prison Betts underwent a transformation from a basically good student who was morally adrift - to a thoughtful and powerful writer. His writing conveys - without melodrama - the really twisted world of the US prison system where who you are as a human being is lost in a bizarre world of regulations, danger, and violence. I was especially struck by how much time Betts spent in "the hole" - solitary confinement for minor rule infractions, and how he ended up in Virginia's infamous Red Onion "super max" prison, supposedly for the "worst of the worst" - even though he never did anything more violent than push a rookie guard's hands off of his genitals when that new guard was over zealous in doing a pat down search.
Again and again, Betts also reflects on the sad racial facts of the US prison system where the majority of prisoners are Black and Latino, and on the draconian "get tough" sentencing that locks people away for decades. He himself could have been sentenced to life in prison!
I really like how Betts does not try to shock us with violent or terrifying episodes from prison, but instead conveys the soul killing world of prison - and the redemptive nature of the decent human beings who were kind or protective of him.
I would highly recommend this book for reading in classes. It is ultimately a hopeful book. The author has gone on to be a successful poet in addition to this fine non-fiction memoir. I will be recommending it to any students looking for something about prisons, biographies, young writers, and mass incarceration.
New York : Avery, 2010, c2009.
1st trade pbk. ed.
240 p. ; 21 cm.
There have been some really good books out lately about mass incarceration - such as The New Jim Crow and the comic book format, Race to Incarcerate. A Question of Freedom is a great addition to the literature - and especially for high school age readers - in that it personalizes the story in a compelling and finely written memoir by a young man who was sentenced as an adult to 9 years in prison at the age of 16.
Yes, he committed a serious crime - using a gun to carjack a man in a mall parking lot. And yet under the relatively new draconian laws now on the books in many states, he was sentenced a a sixteen year old to serve years in adult penitentiaries in the state of Virginia.
In prison Betts underwent a transformation from a basically good student who was morally adrift - to a thoughtful and powerful writer. His writing conveys - without melodrama - the really twisted world of the US prison system where who you are as a human being is lost in a bizarre world of regulations, danger, and violence. I was especially struck by how much time Betts spent in "the hole" - solitary confinement for minor rule infractions, and how he ended up in Virginia's infamous Red Onion "super max" prison, supposedly for the "worst of the worst" - even though he never did anything more violent than push a rookie guard's hands off of his genitals when that new guard was over zealous in doing a pat down search.
Again and again, Betts also reflects on the sad racial facts of the US prison system where the majority of prisoners are Black and Latino, and on the draconian "get tough" sentencing that locks people away for decades. He himself could have been sentenced to life in prison!
I really like how Betts does not try to shock us with violent or terrifying episodes from prison, but instead conveys the soul killing world of prison - and the redemptive nature of the decent human beings who were kind or protective of him.
I would highly recommend this book for reading in classes. It is ultimately a hopeful book. The author has gone on to be a successful poet in addition to this fine non-fiction memoir. I will be recommending it to any students looking for something about prisons, biographies, young writers, and mass incarceration.
Thursday, April 23, 2015
Ahead of Her Time
Yoko Ono: Collector of Skies by Nell Beram and Carolyn Boriss-Krimsky
New York : Amulet Books, 2013.
177 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 27 cm.
I didn't expect to like this book as much as I did - and additionally, I learned a lot from reading it.
This is the second biography of a woman artist I've read this year, having read - and quite enjoyed - the biography of Georgia O'Keefe back in October. In Collector of Skies, I really enjoyed discovering what an avant garde artist Yoko Ono was. She really was a pioneer in the areas of conceptual and performance art. The book has really nice reproductions of several of her installations, along with great archival photos from her work in the 1960s and 1970s (along with more recent photos).
Beram and Boriss-Krimsky's biography does a great job of detailing the interesting love, artistic and antiwar collaboration between Yoko and the mega-famous John Lennon while keeping the focus squarely on Yoko Ono's life and accomplishments.
To me, the great strength of this book, is that not only do the authors provide a great deal of information about the life of Ono - her artistic, political and intellectual growth, and her personal life - but they manage to make it a very moving story, too. I found myself lost in the joy and liberation that Yoko felt on meeting Lennon and realizing that he was someone who truly understood her work. I also found myself near to tears reading about the murder of John in December of 1980, outside their Central Park apartment.
This book is a great introduction to the life and times of an important artist and pop figure. I will definitely recommend it to students who might be interested.
New York : Amulet Books, 2013.
177 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 27 cm.
I didn't expect to like this book as much as I did - and additionally, I learned a lot from reading it.
This is the second biography of a woman artist I've read this year, having read - and quite enjoyed - the biography of Georgia O'Keefe back in October. In Collector of Skies, I really enjoyed discovering what an avant garde artist Yoko Ono was. She really was a pioneer in the areas of conceptual and performance art. The book has really nice reproductions of several of her installations, along with great archival photos from her work in the 1960s and 1970s (along with more recent photos).
Beram and Boriss-Krimsky's biography does a great job of detailing the interesting love, artistic and antiwar collaboration between Yoko and the mega-famous John Lennon while keeping the focus squarely on Yoko Ono's life and accomplishments.
To me, the great strength of this book, is that not only do the authors provide a great deal of information about the life of Ono - her artistic, political and intellectual growth, and her personal life - but they manage to make it a very moving story, too. I found myself lost in the joy and liberation that Yoko felt on meeting Lennon and realizing that he was someone who truly understood her work. I also found myself near to tears reading about the murder of John in December of 1980, outside their Central Park apartment.
This book is a great introduction to the life and times of an important artist and pop figure. I will definitely recommend it to students who might be interested.
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