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Black Jewels

Harry Belafonte - March 1, 1927 – April 25, 2023

5/2/2023

6 Comments

 

On Whose Shoulders We Stand

PictureScreenshot from PBS “American Masters-Paul Robeson: Here I Stand” Interview directed by St. Clair Bourne, September 21, 1998
By Dr. Robert J. Woodbine April 30, 2023
Harlem Writers Guild member

After having lived a robust ninety-six years, Harry Belafonte passed away five days ago. This news was a gut punch despite my not knowing him personally. I only saw him in person twice. Once, several years ago, as he walked onto the Apollo Theater stage. The other and more recent time was in his wheelchair at the Harry Belafonte 115th Street Library in west Harlem.

There was something about Harry Belafonte, especially in person. Grace. Power. Courage. Nobility. These are the words that come immediately to my mind. He is the archetype of manhood upon whose shoulders one can take flight toward personal growth and purposeful living. I feel the vacuum knowing he is now absent. 

As a current member of the historic Harlem Writers Guild, of which Mr. Belafonte was a past member in the early 1950s, I wanted to understand the root of his inspired life more clearly. Of course, all the well-deserved tributes have and will continue to list his varied artistic and socio-political accomplishments as well they should. But why did he live life the way he did?

Artistically, he will forever be associated with his 1956 rendition of Day-O (The Banana Boat Song) from the album Harry Belafonte Calypso which popularized Caribbean music and culture in America as well as internationally. This one song fueled his commercial popularity and paved the way for his other artistic successes in music and film. 

Have you really listened to the lyrics of Day-O? “Day-O! Day-O! Daylight come and me wan’ go home...Work all night on a drink of rum...Stack banana ‘til the mornin’ come...Come, Mister Tally Ma, tally me banana...Lift six foot, seven foot, eight foot bunch...Daylight come and me wan’ go home...” This is a plaintive, call-and-response work song summarizing the misery, backbreaking, and life-threatening labor endured from sundown to sunrise by Black men on banana plantations throughout the Caribbean (the so-called Banana Republics). 

The indigenous populations of these various Caribbean countries considered the Banana Boat Song their anthem disparaging the exploitative business model and banana plantation system (the United Fruit Company) created in 1899 in Costa Rica by Americans Minor Cooper Keith and Andrew Preston (of the Boston Fruit Company) and which was sustained with the cooperation of the various Caribbean governments and the United States. The historical and sociopolitical context for these American businessmen is the 1896 US Supreme Court case ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson and the growth of racist Jim Crow laws.

In October 1928, almost two years after Harry Belafonte’s birth, thirty-two thousand banana plantation workers organized a strike against the United Fruit Company seeking real wages, better, and more safe working conditions. On December 5-6, 1928, it is estimated that three thousand men, women, and children who were protesting peacefully after attending Sunday mass in Ciénaga near Santa Maria, Colombia were machine-gunned down by the Colombian military (the Banana Massacre). These Colombian citizens were characterized as subversives, communists, socialists and a threat to the US, Colombia, and the United Fruit Company. The then US Ambassador to Colombia, Jefferson Caffery, sent the following dispatch to the US State Department- “I have the honor to report that the Bogota representative of the United Fruit Company told me yesterday that the total number of strikers killed by the Colombian military exceeded 1000.”

Eighteen years later, despite his honorable service in the US Navy during World War II, Harry Belafonte was faced with American racism at home. As a fledgling actor, along with Sidney Poitier and others at the American Negro Theater in Harlem, he had a fateful backstage meeting with Paul Robeson after performing in the theater’s adaptation of Sean O’Casey’s play Juno and the Paycock. From Mr. Robeson, Harry Belafonte learned about the richness and nobility of Black and African culture and the maxim that “...artists are the gatekeepers of truth.”

Harry Belafonte’s commitment to fight injustice was not a complement to his artistic talent and something he grew into after tiring of commercial artistic success. His social activism was not an afterthought. Rather the two were intertwined and inseparable. His lifelong association and friendship with Paul Robeson provided him the clarity and fortitude to live his life accordingly. The Banana Boat Song was not just a successful artistic commercial endeavor. It was Harry Belafonte’s initial expression of his mentor’s maxim, “The artist must elect to fight for freedom or slavery. I have made my choice. I had no alternative. The history of the capitalist era is characterized by the degradation of my people: despoiled of their lands, their true culture destroyed...denied equal protection of the law and deprived their rightful place in the respect of their fellows. –Paul Roberson” This is what was at the root of why Harry Belafonte lived life as he did.

While I feel the vacuum of Mr. Belafonte’s physical absence, I know his voice, his legacy of activism and integrity through the arts is embodied in the work of so many others and it persists. It is integral to the mission of the Harlem Writers Guild. And, as he stood on the shoulders of Paul Robeson, we now firmly stand on his.


6 Comments

Ain’t No Mo’ by Jordan E. Cooper

12/20/2022

2 Comments

 
On Friday, December 16th at 8:00pm, two days before Ain’t No Mo’ was to close on Broadway at the Belasco Theatre, I saw it a second time.

I’m unable to tell it all in this review because there’s so much extraordinary talent, emotion, truth, blatant, funny and dramatic, that one MUST SEE to understand what is shared about this fearless play.

First of all, the inimitable Playwright, JORDAN E. COOPER, lives in each character he has created. I know from one playwright to another. At one moment responding to a call to action from the stage, I got carried away, forgot I was in theatre, and was about to run to the front of the stage until I was restrained.  That ability to foment that kind of response from the audience is genius.  The play is alive and that’s all we really need to say. At the end when Peaches goes through what she goes through (not giving it away), I was overwhelmed with every distraught, unconscious feeling of loss, but I started clapping. Somebody told my personal story.

There are multiple themes in Ain’t No Mo’ and one of them is a contemporary Marcus Garvey, Back-to-Africa movement. Black people jump up and decide: “We tired of this shit and we gawn.”  It’s also a mourning and wakeup call regarding desired change that never happened for Black people after Barack Obama became our first Black President. 

Controversial and eventually reverberating around the world, Cooper proclaims that Black folks own the exclusive right to use the word, “nigger, nigga, niggah,” and all the variations...at will.  This exclusive right MUST be defended since some folks want to demand and dictate when we can use it. How dare they try to covertly appropriate the use of our word claiming we can’t use it; it’s racist! It is ours, exclusively to use!

Ain’t No Mo’ celebrates the myriad ways Black folks have cultivated and retained our culture, all of it, from Africa to Harlem to the deep South, incarceration and the murders of our people and more all imbued in one character named Black.  Oh, I told you it’s too much to tell…that’s why you got to go see it NOW.  

Belasco Theatre, Ain’t No Mo’. 
https://aintnomobway.com/


2 Comments

​​ What might James Baldwin say about our country of 2021?

12/20/2022

1 Comment

 
​As a black girl growing up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the 1960’s, I was mesmerized whenever I saw James Baldwin on television, a dark skinned “Negro” man with piercing, animated eyes, exuding the confidence and intellect equal to any white person I had ever seen and heard before.  Without hatred, he spoke directly into the authoritarian faces of white men challenging America’s persecution of black folk and people of color and questioning America’s humanity when she engaged in racism and brutality.
 
​I learned that James Baldwin refused to hate; however, he was intolerant of hate of any kind toward anyone. 
​Rather, he
preached a truth that we all need to run toward just about now.
 
To Baldwin, writing was more important than anything so much so he left America in 1948 because he could not write in America.  In an interview, he told Henry Louis Gates, Jr. why he left the United States.  “It was November 1948, Armistice Day, as a matter of fact. I left because I was a writer.  I had discovered writing and I had a family to save.  I had only one weapon to save them, my writing. And I couldn’t write in the United States.”
 
James knew that writing gave him a voice and power.   In Milwaukee, people in power wanted black voices shut down. We were greatly outnumbered by the “silent majority” and they were doing their best to keep us segregated in schools and neighborhoods, economically impaired and politically emasculated. There was so much oppression that I was convinced that I would never see a black man no less a woman as President of the United states.  I didn’t even dream of that possibility. However, when I witnessed James Baldwin speaking out with tenacious power, I knew I had to become a writer.
 
So, what might James Baldwin say about our country of 2020?
 
He might say that if we continue to look the other way, this country will become entrapped in a momentum of destruction, racial intolerance and hatred that we won’t be able to stop.  That the moment is now to oppose the growing, insidious will to undo civil liberties, suppress freedom of speech and withhold justice for all.  That we have no other choice than to embrace our humanity while we still have it and fearlessly fight back.
 
James Baldwin might say, “I am my brother’s keeper and if I am destroyed, my brother is too.” Read The Fire Next Time and study what Baldwin wrote about race relations in the 1960’s – almost sixty years ago – some things have changed and much remains the same.
 
We, all of us, white, black, brown, yellow, red, the glorious rainbow of mankind, must refuse to go back to hatred and bigotry.  Some might argue that we have already gone back beyond redemption. But I do not believe that.  We have been misled and are lost, but together we can find our way. We have come too far to turn back now for we surely know that our only other recourse will be the fire next time.
1 Comment

The Harlem Writers Guild: Summer Means Poetry

9/6/2016

1 Comment

 
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After a busy winter and spring, Harlem Writers Guild members laid down our quills, powered off our laptops and took a much needed and earned respite. Some of us headed upstate to places like Hyde Park to explore some of New York’s amazing national parks and learn more about badass women like Eleanor Roosevelt. Others took road trips to revisit their alma maters or took rejuvenating walks along the beach.

Although we were scattered on the winds, we did regroup several times over the summer to share new work and support some of our favorite Harlem institutions.


Diane Richards, Eartha Watts Hicks, Judy Andrews, Minnette Coleman, Angela Dews, and Saundra Whitley read original works and selections from other well-known writers.

The summer months were bathed in lyricism and we hope to continue our wonderful new partnership with the Harlem branch of the New York Public Library system, but now it’s time to step boldly into the fall and all the awesome things it has to offer. One of those awesome, highly anticipated events is the Brooklyn Book Festival. The Guild didn’t participate last year, but we have once again taken a table at the week-long event (September 12th -18th). We are thrilled to be included among independent and mainstream presses and will offer new and older works by Guild members. Some of us will also sneak off to see some of the fantastic authors speaking, reading, and selling their books including Margo Jefferson (Negroland), Pete Hamill (Snow In August), Marc Lamont Hill (Nobody: Casualties of America's War on the Vulnerable, From Ferguson to Flint and Beyond), and Bernice L. McFadden (The Book of Harlan), to name a few.

The Brooklyn Book Festival is the largest free literary event in NYC and one of the best. Be sure to come out and experience great literature and great people!

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There is even more to look forward to as we head into autumn.
Be sure to stay tuned!   
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SUMMER TIME IS BOOK FAIR TIME!

5/2/2016

1 Comment

 
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Grace Edwards, Eartha Watts Hicks & K.C. Washington
Can you smell it? Can you feel it? The quickening as spring gives way to summer? It’s almost here and what hitches a ride on spring’s coattails? Book fairs!

We here at the Guild already turned the page with our first fair hosted by the lovely, dedicated whip smart women of the _Brooklyn chapter of Delta Sigma Theta. We laughed, we chatted, we sold books & we met Kevin Powell,who was there to promote his new memoir “The Education of Kevin Powell”! Powell along with activist, journalist and radio personality Raqiyah Mays were featured speakers at the sorority’s annual book fair, whose theme this year was “Black  Girls’ Voices: Past, Present, and Future.”

DST’s wonderful, low-key event was the perfect way to kick off the literary season---they even fed us---which from mid-April with the DST fair there is almost an event a month until October. And although the Guild doesn’t participate in all of fairs and book related events, we thought our readers would appreciate a sampling of the vast array of fun & informative book fairs around NYC & beyond.
If you see us at one of the fairs, please be sure to stop by and say hello, and of course buy a book if you are so inclined.
​
*For a more comprehensive list of book fairs and other book related events go to www.aalbc.com/events/ 
​
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The Bronx Book Fair Bronx Library Center/New York Public Library, Bronx, New York Dates: Saturday, May 7, 2016 to Sunday, May 8, 2016 More Info Web: http://bxlitfest.com/  ​
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Harlem Book Fair Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Harlem, New York
Date: Saturday, July 16, 2016 Time: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free.
More Info Web: http://www.harlembookfair.com/ Email: [email protected]
Hosted by: Max Rodriguez Date: Saturday, July 16, 2016 Time: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. More Info Web: http://www.harlembookfair.com/ Email: 
[email protected]
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Brooklyn Book Festival Various Venues, Brooklyn, New York
Monday, September 12, 2016 to Sunday, September 18, 2016
More Info Web: http://www.brooklynbookfestival.org/ Phone: 570-362-6657 Email: 
[email protected]
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2016 Phillis Wheatley Book Awards Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Harlem
Date: Sunday, July 17, 2016 Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
More Info Web: http://www.harlembookfair.com/#!wheatleybookawards/cjg9
Description This annual award, named for the first published African-American female writer, is given for literary work and literary advocacy that transcends culture, boundary, and perception.
&&&
It's been a full, fun, and busy year thus far and in order to reassess, refresh, and recharge we are going to take a summer hiatus. We will see you back here in September with lots of news and wonderful events to take us all through the rest of the year! 
​Happy summer!
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K.C. Washington, author
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Celebrating one of our own!

4/4/2016

2 Comments

 
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Friends, Family, & Students gather to celebrate John Oliver Killens.
After much hard work, planning, strategizing, and reaching out to the network on behalf of the Center for Black Literature, the Harlem Writers Guild, and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture our John Oliver Killens at 100 event came off with nary a hitch!
 
Taking over the Founders Auditorium at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn on March 17, distinguished former students, family, and friends took the stage to praise their mentor and beloved friend.
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After introductions and opening remarks by Dr. Brenda M. Greene, Executive Director of CBL and our own Executive Director Diane Richards, actor, writer, and all around bon vivant, Eric Coleman presented the likes of Bernice McFadden, Malaika Adero, Woodie King, Jr., and others who helmed panels with themes such as “Friends’ Reflections” and “The Oeuvre of John Oliver Killens”.
 
The audience laughed and signified along with Tony Medina, Cynthia Kitt, and Mariahadessa Ekere Tallie as they performed dramatic readings from Killens’ powerful, important works. ​
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Louise Meriwether, Diane Richards
​& K.C. Washington
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Cynthia Kitt & her lovely daughter
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African drummers kicked things off and then after a rousing evening of African American letters, we made new connections and hopefully new friends and colleagues over refreshments.
 
The Guild was pleased and honored to cohost John Oliver Killens at 100 and look forward to working and growing with our partners the Center for Black Literature and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture into the future.
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2 Comments

March, The Month When Lions & Lambs Unite (Sort Of)

3/1/2016

1 Comment

 
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March is a cool month in and of itself. Not only is spring about to be sprung, but no less than twelve days are dedicated to everything from National Puppy Day and World Poetry Day to Cesar Chavez Day and World Kidney Day. It’s a month that likes to celebrate and one of those things to celebrate, to raise your hands in the air like you just don’t care is the announcement of the National Black Writers Conference (NBWC), which takes place at the end of the month.

​The conference is hosted by the 
Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College out in Brooklyn, and was created in 1986 by John Oliver Killen’s, the same man who helped founded our little Guild back in 1950. The event, 3 days of affordable yet pricelessly informative and inspiring panels and workshops offers some of today’s best African American thinkers and scribes, like Edwidge Danticat and Charles Johnson. In addition, this year the Center for Black Literature, the HWG, and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, in a run up to the main event, is honoring the 100th birthday and life’s work of civil rights activist and literary lion John Oliver Killens.

Killen is not only one of the Guild’s forefathers but also:

Author. Activist. Educator. Mentor. Social critic. The invaluable contributions of John Oliver Killens remain foundational to the continued growth of African-American letters. Author of novels, essays, articles, short stories, plays, and screenplays, his writing has been translated into more than a dozen languages. His first novel, Youngblood, considered a classic of social protest fiction on par with Native Son and Invisible Man, was met with critical acclaim and thrust him onto the national stage. That the novel was published the same month in 1954 of the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court ruling aptly contextualizes his career. Killens considered it his duty as an artist to disrupt the sociopolitical landscape of racist America. He had a strong and committed "belief in the revolutionary power of writing and the need for people of color to bring their stories to light."*

Free, 
John Oliver Killens at 100 will be held two weeks before the NBWC on March 17th from 6:30-8:30 will feature everyone from Dr. Brenda Green of the CBL, independent editor Malaika Adero, Woodie King, Jr. of the New Federal Theater, and our own Cynthia Kitt, among others. Friends, family, and admirers will take the stage to share personal reflections and dramatic readings from Killen’s work. It is a special event, for a very special man who deserves his place in the literary cannon and the civil rights movement to be recognized, remembered and rejoiced.
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 That said, although we are overjoyed to be a part of John Oliver Killens’ 100th birthday celebration, and there are many other wonderful male writers associated with the Harlem Writers Guild including John Henrik Clarke and Walter Christmas, it’s also Women’s History Month and we’d be remiss if we didn’t shout the praises of the many women of the Guild. ​
Some of these women, such as Audrey Lorde, Paule Marshall, and Grace F. Edwards, against conventional wisdom and antiquated ideas of the Victorian Cult of Womanhood, helped found our venerable organization. And without them, without their voices and their art, African American letters would indeed go out with a whimper.
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Happy Black History Month!

1/31/2016

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 We are all overworked, perhaps overwhelmed, and certainly underpaid. The holidays are over, the bills are piling in, and baby, it’s cold outside. And then wrapped around monetized hearts and fattening chocolates Black History Month sneaks up on us. It’s easy to be dismissive, cynical. We’ve got Michelle & Barack and their beautiful, well-behaved and soon to be wildly accomplished daughters, not to mention Loretta Lynch, Melissa Harris Perry, and Ta’Nehisi Coates, who needs Negro History Week aka McDonald’s new ad campaign aimed at good looking, trendsetting black millennials? The short answer is we do.
 
We may have much to be proud of, much to celebrate, but sadly as a people we are not there yet and can ill-afford to be dismissive, to be cynical because there is still much to be done to get to where as a brilliant, strong people we deserve to be. And if you’ve been following Harlem Writes, you know that we believe deeply that the journey requires looking forward while still holding our past close.
 
So this month, in honor of Black History, past and future, we are re-printing an article on the need for diversity in publishing written by Elizabeth Nunez, an award winning Distinguished Professor at Hunter College, CUNY.

Professor Nunez touches on many things in her excellent piece for Writer’s Digest 
magazine, including the importance of many different voices in order to keep literature fresh, alive, and relevant for future generations. But she also reaches back and pays homage to James Baldwin, Richard Wright, and little old us, the Harlem Writers Guild
. And in doing so, she not only succinctly makes her case, but with any luck, also paves the way for up and coming writers of color.

Happy Valentine's Day & happy reading!

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1 Comment

HAPPY NEW YEAR! NOW LET’S GET STARTED!

1/1/2016

14 Comments

 
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It’s that time again, folks. A new year is upon us and we have much to anticipate, much to do, and much to appreciate. What might those things be you ask? 
  • Well, there’s writing works of fiction & non-fiction across every genre, which captivate, inspire, motivate.

  • There’s reaching out to the community to lift as we climb

  • Find new readers and writers of color 

  • Get an agent for those of us who are still searching!

  • Bring the words & works of our members to you, gentle readers, through readings around the our fair city


And that’s just the beginning. We are planning on running profiles of our members so that you may get to know us better, and of course we would love to hear from you throughout the year about what else you’d like to see from the Guild. 

There are big things on the horizon, the world is our oyster & we are ready to feast!
 Read This: If I Should Die by Grace Edwards 
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Write to Delight!

Love K.C.
​
14 Comments

BOOKS DON'T LEAVE CAVITIES

12/1/2015

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 I adore Christmas and I love a good stocking stuffer, be it fancy soaps or two packs of Modell Sporting Goods socks! But as a writer, I like nothing better than a new journal, the perfect pen, or a good book. 

Nerd that I am, I am a devotee of Goodreads.com, a Facebook style website for all things book and literary. There, using “shelves” I’ve created and labeled by year or topic, I keep track of all the books I’ve read, want to read, and are currently engrossed in. I make a booklist every year, usually by theme but not always, although, one year for kicks I read a biography on every American president (took me 2 years), and once I read the Bible cover to cover, along with four other books on world religions. My head reeled for weeks! 

My goal is 36 books a year. I usually make it to 24, sometimes more, if I’m not doing research for one of my own novels. And I have to admit that I do not adhere strictly to the list. I create the list in December but eleven months later, I have added titles I’ve come across in the Sunday Times Book Review,Writer’s Digest, Entertainment Weekly, or through recommendations, and subtracted books that I suddenly find uninteresting or simple aren’t in the mood for. As everyone knows, the muse can be a fickle mistress. 

Anyway, below, in the spirit of giving, the HWG and Harlem Writes would like to share with you some of the book that left us teary, cheering, terrified, or thoughtful throughout the year. Pick up a copy at your local library (we hope you support your local library!), download one for your Nook or Kindle, or buy a copy for your bestie at an independent bookshop (ditto). However you roll, get your book on and stuff someone’s stocking, heart and mind with a good book! Happy Holidays & Happy New Year! 

K.C. Washington, author of Mourning Becomes Her & the new Harlow Ophelia Jackson Mystery series

My Life in France by Julia Child and Alex Prud’Homme: I was able to indulge my deep love of all things Paris, food, travel, and history. Julia’s voice is charming, honest, funny, and smart. By the end of the book, I almost booked my ticket on Air France!

Winnie Mandela by Nancy Harrison: I confess, although I am a huge admirer of Winnie, I have never read a book about her. After re-reading Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom, I tackled this slim volume. Written in a clear and concise voice, full of admiration yet balanced, I came out of Winnie Mandela filled with gratitude for the Mother of the Nation and her struggle and sacrifice. She was everything I had hoped and suspected she would be. She is her own woman.

Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America by Jill Leovy: Journalist and crime beat writer Leovy tells the story of the brief lives and horrifying deaths of African American men in South Central, Los Angeles as experienced through a white homicide detective John Skaggs and Wallace Tennelle, a highly respected black detective whose son is murdered steps from his front door. As we follow their gripping story of hard work, empathy, luck, and justice for one unfortunate family, we also learn about how black men are killing one another and why Los Angeles and the country at large allows it.

Jam on the Vine by LaShonda Katrice Barnett: Ivoe Williams, the precocious daughter of a Muslim cook and a metalsmith from central-east Texas, first ignites her lifelong obsession with journalism when she steals a newspaper from her mother’s white employer.  *From book jacket* And then all unexpected hell breaks loose!

Eye on the Struggle: Ethel Payne, the First Lady of the Black Press by James McGrath Morris:James McGrath Morris brings into focus the riveting life of one of the most significant yet least known figures of the civil rights era—pioneering journalist Ethel Payne, the “First Lady of the Black Press”—elevating her to her rightful place in history at last. *From book jacket*

Ruby by Cynthia Bond: Haunting, beautiful, exhausting, the grandchild of Toni Morrison’s “Beloved”. Everyone should read it but don’t blame me if you can’t sleep for days. Lovely.

Minnette Coleman, author of The Blacksmith’s Daughter

Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: Beautifully written. About a wealthy and very Catholic Nigerian family, the story as told by the daughter. Her rich but supposedly 'godly' father funds the local church, pays for hospital and schooling for many in their community but won't allow his father in his home because he is a heathen. Also, he beats, tortures and abuses his family when they don't act 'godly enough'. You wonder how someone can love a parent like this who pours scalding water over your feet for lying and then cries because he had to do it. "This is what it feels like to walk in sin" he tells her and her brother. Very interesting book.

Judy Andrews, author of An Ocean of Jewels

Trust: Mastering the 4 Essential Trusts: Trust in God, Trust in Self, Trust in Others, Trust in Life,by Iyanla Vanzant.
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