…..my colleague Gregory Adamo, on the publication of his new book! Woo-woo!
OCTOBER 6TH UPDATE: I just wrote a review for Amazon on the book’s paperback page.
…..my colleague Gregory Adamo, on the publication of his new book! Woo-woo!
OCTOBER 6TH UPDATE: I just wrote a review for Amazon on the book’s paperback page.
I will always remember Ronald Walters as a brother who treated me as seriously as he treated someone from, say, The New York Times. I will also remember that he directly served Black people and (only) wrote 10 books, instead of indirectly serving Black people and writing 20 books.
SEPTEMBER 14 UPDATE: Here is must-listen radio show on Walters.
If only we all could be this lucky. 🙂
……..Dream Hampton (left), the co-author of “Decoded,” Jay Z’s “as told to” autobiography. Glad to see Black journalists getting these opportunities.
Well! I’ll give Nicholas Kristof credit for his honesty. These folks only admit that whites matter more than Blacks in stories about Africa in academic books and J-seminars and such. (I first noted the problem when I was 25 or so, when Amy Biehl died and ABC’s “Primetime Live” pulled out the stops.) So it’s good to finally see this mostly intra-racial discussion (as in, among whites 🙂 ) in the mainstream media.
Of course, what’s always missing is a harder—and Blacker—perspective. So here it is, and some comment about it.
Man, I hope Debra Dickerson bounces back. It hurt me on levels to read and hear about what she’s going through.
A confession: While listening to the latter yesterday, I have to admit that I thought that when one day I had “arrived” as a writer, Debra Dickerson—someone who’d I defined as a leftist contrarian—would be my “enemy.” (I loved her autobiography, An American Story, even when I disagreed with it.) In my fantasy, we’d “fight” via dueling essays in elite white magazines, and I’d live (well) off of it. Ah, the dreams of Cult-Nat Afro-Saxons….. 🙂
Her story, as articulated on NPR’s “Tell Me More” with Michel Martin yesterday, is more proof that the Great Pumpkin is not coming for wannabe fulltime writers—defined here as people who write essays, books and articles for a fulltime living. Particularly for Black ones. Alas, the experiences of these sisters, when coupled with the army of I-used-to-be-powerful-Black-journalist-but-now-I’m-a-blogger-without-a-book-contract now out here, it’s pretty clear that Black America has no real Black intellectual-literary class.
JULY 29th UPDATE: I think this reality applies also to another of my writing heroes, Amy Alexander. She seemingly didn’t understand that she was being shifted from a respected journo post to that of a nonprofit staffer (read: flunky :)).