The Rejected Stone
Al Sharpton and the Path to American Leadership
by Reverend Al Sharpton
Cash Money Content
Hardcover, $22.00
270 pages
ISBN: 978-1-9363-9947-5
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“As
you read through the following pages and get a sense of my journey and the
lessons I’ve learned, I believe you will come to understand why I’ve not been
unsettled or slowed down by the attempts over the years to paint me with a
broad brush as some kind of troublemaker or self-interested hustler. While
those caricatures might have become media shorthand, I was not about to let the
world define me…
The
America I faced in the 1980s
wearing the jogging suit was not the same place as the America I speak
to now, yet I still find myself leading marches to protest outrages like the
shooting death of Trayvon Martin or the widespread attempts to roll back voting
rights. I moved with the times, updated my style and approach so that I never
became irrelevant.
--
Excerpted from Chapter One (page 7)
In Chapter
21, Verse 42 of the Book of Matthew, Jesus observed that “The stone the
builders rejected has become the cornerstone.” Now, Reverend Al Sharpton paraphrases
that parable for the title and theme of “The Rejected Stone,” an enlightening autobiography/how-to
tome in which the longtime civil rights leader retraces his path from fiery
street activist to international icon.
Besides
reflecting on the highpoints of his controversial career, the outspoken author has
23 lessons to offer ambitious individuals interested in following in his
footsteps. He elaborates upon those priceless pearls of wisdom individually in
chapters all their own entitled, “Learning from Flawed Leaders,” “Never Rest on
Your Laurels,” “Practice What You Preach,” and “Don’t Be Afraid to Be Big,” to
name a few.
As
interesting as Rev’s sage advice, however, are his personal anecdotes. For he’s
ostensibly rubbed shoulders with folks from every station in life. And like a
black Forest Gump, the peripatetic Sharpton has not only managed to land at the
center of many an historic moment, but he even has a knack for summarizing the
event in “Life is like a box of chocolates” fashion.
For
example, he talks about having to pinch himself while attending President
Obama’s inauguration earlier this year, when he realized that he was sitting up
on the same platform with Congress, the Cabinet, the Supreme Court and
luminaries like Jay-Z and Beyonce’. Not bad for a poor kid from Brooklyn whose father abandoned the family when Al was
just 9.
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