Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crash of 2008 and What It Means

by George Soros
PublicAffairs
Hardcover, $22.95
192 pages, illustrated
ISBN: 978-1-58648-683-9

Book Review by Kam Williams

“We are in the midst of a financial crisis the likes of which has not been seen since the Great Depression of the 1930s… This crisis is not confined to a particular firm or a particular segment of the financial system; it has brought the entire system to the brink of a breakdown, and it is being contained only with the greatest difficulty. This will have far-reaching consequences. It is not business as usual but the end of an era.” -- Excerpted from Chapter 5 “The Super Bubble Hypothesis” (page 81)

Was the bursting of the housing bubble just a momentary correction or the tip of the iceberg of an economic crisis about to envelope the entire country? George Soros believes we’re looking at the latter, and goes to great lengths to explain why, in his words, “This is the first time since the Great Depression that the international financial system has come to close to a genuine meltdown.”
While the left-leaning billionaire might be best known for his criticisms of the Bush administration and for underwriting the efforts of MoveOn.org, many forget that he is also a brilliant businessman who amassed his great fortune speculating in the currency and stock markets. Now, with the publication of The New Paradigm for Financial Markets he shares with anyone who will listen exactly how we got into this mess, and where to invest your cash and dwindling resources to best weather the impending the collapse.
Though a bit dense at times in terms of statistical analysis, being awash in charts and graphs, the text is nonetheless the most fascinating contribution to the field of money management since the equally-absorbing best-seller Freakonomics. Interweaving politics with economics, Soros shows the role that greed and power have played in placing us in the current predicament.
For one, he rejects the classical economic theory which teaches that supply is a function of demand and vice-versa. Instead, he makes the radical argument that the supply and demand curves do not determine market prices at all; otherwise, we would generally witness greater price fluctuations.
Of far more consequence is power, which might explain why the cost of oil has skyrocketed since the election of a president who filled his administration filled with executives from that industry. “The primary purpose of political discourse is to gain power and to stay in power,” Soros states. “Those who fail to recognize this are unlikely to be in power.”
This is why Bush was more than willing to manipulate the truth in any way he saw fit to deceive the public while furthering the interests of big oil and other corporate conglomerates he is beholden to. This arrogant attitude is reflected in the Orwellian comment of a White House aide quoted as asserting, “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality… We’re history’s actors… and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”
The 77 year-old Soros survived living under Hitler, and then survived living under Communism, and is presently unafraid to speak out forcefully when he recognizes the signs of the emergence of another such totalitarian regime. A sobering blend of financial and political analysis which incorporates the pivotal role of shady shenanigans and corporate corruption in the rapidly-approaching decline of a supposedly free market.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

25 Things That Really Matter in Life

25 Things That Really Matter in Life:
A Comprehensive Guide to Making Your Life Better
by Gary A. Johnson
Courtland Press
Paperback, $9.95
76 pages
ISBN: 978-0-9791113-0-3

Book Review by Kam Williams

“25 Things That Really Matter in Life is designed to get you started living a better life within the next fifteen minutes… If you want a book to help you begin to change your life right now, then keep reading, because this is the book for you… The techniques and steps that I describe in the following pages are ones I’ve been using for over thirty years. If you commit to them, I guarantee you will live a more meaningful and healthier life… Let’s get started!” -- Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 12-16)

Are you stuck in the doldrums? Could you use some help to kickstart your life? Then you might want to consider reading this handy little how-to guide by Gary Johnson, publisher of BlackMeninAmerica.com and founder of the consulting firm which bears his name.
Mr. Johnson is also an inspirational speaker whose services are always in demand. And now, with the publication of 25 Things That Really Matter in Life, you can be motivated by the man without having to attend one of his lectures or workshops.
The book is designed to take less than an hour to read, while promising the potential to transform you instantly. The words contained on the pages are mostly meaningful meditations on what the author has found to be most important to him, as opposed to advice dictating specific behavior to improve your plight.
Still, Gary makes a convincing case that his 3-step path probably works, for he acknowledges having himself gone through tough times marked by debt, depression and withdrawal. When he was bottoming out, he made a list of the things that mattered most to him, a therapeutic process which helped him get his priorities in order while simultaneously freeing him to feel good again.
He realized that foremost among what he values are Faith, Family, Love, Children and Health, and he explains succinctly why each entry deserves to be a priority. After he expounds on all 25 of his personal areas of concern, the focus shifts to Step 2. Here, the text changes into a workbook, allotting space for you the reader to delineate 25 things you most want to achieve in life.
This, in turn, enables you to embark ultimately on Step 3, namely, mastery of your own life. A timely tome for anyone seriously seeking to take the steps to shed self-destructive habits and dysfunctional influences in order to become “the best possible you.”

To purchase a copy of the book, call: (888) 852-5813
Or visit: http://courtlandpress.com/Buy_The_Book.html

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Breaking Free: My Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder

Breaking Free:
My Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder
by Herschel Walker
with Gary Brozek and Charlene Maxfield
Foreword by Dr. Jerry Mungadze
Touchstone Books
Hardcover, $24.95
256 pages
ISBN: 978-1-4165-3748-9

Book Review by Kam Williams

“For most of my life, from childhood onward, I had a form of mental illness that enabled me to be simultaneously a fierce competitor…and a quiet unassuming man who let his actions do the talking. When I was diagnosed with Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) shortly after I ended my playing career, I wasn’t certain if what I was being told about myself was true…
When my doctors explained to me that I had developed other personalities (aka “alters”) to help me cope with and survive the pain, alienation, and abuse I experienced as a child and adolescent, I was skeptical.
This book… is a part of my coming to terms with this diagnosis... I want to be sure that readers understand how difficult this is for me [because] I wasn’t aware of the multiple personalities who existed in my mind… I now understand that there may have been as many as twelve distinct alters enabling me to cope with my reality.”
Excerpted from the Author’s note (pages xiv-xv)

In 1982, Herschel Walker won the Heisman Trophy for being the best college football player in the country while only a junior at the University of Georgia. The gifted running back then left school early to turn pro, going on to enjoy gridiron greatness during a 15-year career, first in the fledgling USFL, and then in the NFL.
What neither Herschel or anyone else around him knew, however, was that he’d been suffering since childhood from Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), what is commonly referred to in layman’s terms as multiple personalities. With 20-20 hindsight, this helps explains how he could be so brutally violent on the football field, yet behave like a pussycat away from the game.
But after he retired from the sport, he found it harder and harder to integrate his assorted personas, presumably because he no longer had an outlet for his more aggressive and anti-social alter-egos. As a result, he bottomed-out by not only cheating on but putting a loaded gun to the temple of Cindy, his college sweetheart and wife of 16 years. That ruined the marriage, and the couple divorced, agreeing to share custody of their son, Christian.
Fortunately, Herschel sought out therapy for his inexplicable mood swings, and was eventually diagnosed as having DID by Dr. Jerry Mungadze. Apparently, experts disagree about whether the disease really exists, especially since it seems to affect only people in North America.
Nonetheless, in Breaking Free: My Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder, Walker claims his affliction was triggered by the stress from being teased as a child for stuttering and being fat. But I would hazard a guess that even a casual reader of this revealing autobiography would wonder why he doesn’t pin the blame on an incident he witnessed at the age of six when one of his friends was carted off by noose-wielding Ku Klux Klansmen in sheets.
I suspect that perhaps it was either the influence of his shrink or his two collaborators on the book which led Herschel to play down the near lynching. Regardless, the memoir is worthwhile for the shockingly-honest look it offers inside the troubled mind of a revered sports icon.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Faith under Fire: Betrayed by a Thing Called Love

A memoir by LaJoyce Brookshire
Karen Hunter Publishing
Hardcover, $24.00
270 pages
ISBN: 978-1-4165-6645-8

Book Review by Kam Williams

“God has given me the opportunity to reach scores of women, connecting with their spirits to bring understanding to the ‘down low phenomenon. I am amazed at the number of women who have found themselves in the same types of relationships that I had.
For years, I truly felt as if this was only my plight, as if I was the only one whose husband cheated with men… This journey has broadened the scope of my vision of this unbelievable reality.
LaJoyce, like me and the growing number of women who refuse to stand by silently allowing the stigmas and dangers of HIV/AIDS to continue, is sharing her story to take back the control and take back the power that HIV/AIDS has stolen from lives, relationships and families.”
-- Brenda Stone Browder (author of The Survival Guide for Women Living with Men on the Down Low) in The Foreword (pages xxi-xxii)

Everybody knows about the escalating AIDS rate which has been devastating the black community. African-Americans now account for the majority of HIV infections in the U.S., with black women representing over two-thirds of the new diagnoses among females, and black teens over two-thirds of them in their age group.
For this reason, inner city schools all over the country ought to consider adding LaJoyce Brookshire’s Faith under Fire: Betrayed by a Thing Called Love, to their curricula as a precaution. Her eye-opening memoir shows just how easily even a successful professional like her could be duped by a duplicitous brother on the down low and thereby put herself at risk of dying from the preventable disease at an early age.
In LaJoyce’s case, she was very lucky that she learned the truth about her man before she contracted the illness, not that he was inclined to let her on his dirty little secret. Although he already had been HIV+ for about ten years when they met, he courted, married and impregnated her with no intention of revealing why he periodically suffered from bleeding ulcers and array of other maladies.
Only well into their marriage did a bell go off in LaJoyce’s head, after a hospital doctor asked her why her husband refused to allow him to administer an HIV test. Turns out Steven by then had full-blown AIDS, and his monogamous wife was pretty shocked by the carousing, carelessness and sexual preferences of what she had incorrectly assumed to be a straight, homophobic and faithful spouse.
However, there were many warning signs, if she had just been willing to take notice. And she delineates how to makes sure your partner isn’t also on the down low in a helpful chapter about avoiding becoming another statistic. She suggests starting by inquiring whether he’s HIV+, then taking an AIDS test together. And while waiting for the results to come back, she supplies a list of 200 additional probing questions that must be answered honestly and thoroughly before the relationship becomes intimate.
Not exactly my idea of romantic, but I suppose sisters can’t be too careful nowadays, given the spread of AIDS by convicts, by intravenous drug users and by brothers simply too afraid to admit they’re gay or bisexual due to the macho nature of an African-American culture marked by a general intolerance of homosexuality.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

The Real McCain

The Real McCain:
Why Conservatives Don’t Trust Him
And Why independents Shouldn’t
by Cliff Schechter
PoliPoint Press
Paperback, $14.95
200 pages
ISBN: 978-0-9794822-9-8

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Race is one of the hot-button social issues of our time. As someone whose ancestors owned slaves and fought on the side of the Confederacy, McCain might have gone out of his way to stake out a clear and progressive position. Instead… he voted against making Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday a federal holiday…
As recently as September 1999, McCain said that choosing whether to fly the Confederate flag ‘should be left to the states,’ and that ‘personally, I see the flag as a symbol of heritage.”
-- Excerpted from Chapter Eight (pages 118-119)

Ever since the campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination turned ugly, all the attention has focused on the nasty, protracted battle between Obama and Clinton, with the candidates’ every misstatement, association and peccadillo being dissected and examined under the media microscope. Meanwhile, the presumptive Republican nominee has been enjoying a free pass.
However, people shouldn’t assume that, just because no one’s critically assessing John McCain’s resume’, his voting record and checkered past don’t deserve every bit as much scrutiny. Fortunately, political commentator Cliff Schecter agrees, and he’s written a revealing expose’ about the hot-headed senior senator from Arizona.
In the interest of equal time, his book, The Real McCain, deserves serious consideration by any citizen who believes in the Fairness Doctrine, because it reveals numerous rather disconcerting factoids about the war hero with designs on the White House. For instance, speaking of his stint in the Hanoi Hilton, are you aware that he cooperated with the enemy while being held in a POW camp? George Bush let that cat out of the bag when running against him back in 2000.
We learn that during that same campaign the Bush camp claimed that McCain had a black love child with a mistress. If true, the infidelity wasn’t the big news, since he’d already taken full responsibility for the failure of his first marriage, admitting to cheating on his wife after she was seriously injured in an auto accident.
But he didn’t say with whom. McCain having Jungle Fever would be noteworthy primarily because “his great-grandfather was a slaveholder who fought and died for the Confederacy,” and he had followed in his forefather’s steps by faithfully voting against African-American interests. So, just like segregationist Senator Strom Thurmond, a mulatto skeleton in the closet would mean McCain was another racist hypocrite masking his having the hots for black women.
Chock full of shocking indiscretions ranging from all of the above to allegations of bribe-taking, war profiteering, backstabbing, flip-flopping and even angry calling his wife a [C-word] in front of the press, The Real McCain is a book likely to take the bloom off the rose of a man whose past might otherwise remain unchallenged between the present and the general election.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Free Lunch

Free Lunch:
How the Wealthiest Americans enrich Themselves at Government Expense
(and Stick You with the Bill)
by David Cay Johnston
Portfolio
Hardcover, $24.95
334 pages
ISBN: 978-1-59184-191-3

Book Review by Kam Williams

“The evidence of a growing divide between the superrich and everyone else in America is so overwhelming that all but the few lightweight ideologues among economists acknowledge this harsh truth... A national debate has arisen over just what is going on
Why are the rich getting so much richer, while the middle class struggles and the poor fall behind? Why are the richest of the rich – billionaires – pulling away even from those whose net worth is in the many millions? Is education behind increasing inequality, as the White House says?
In the pages ahead we will examine just how thoroughly government has become the servant of the rich… who owe their fortunes less to their enterprise than to the generosity of our Uncle Sam.”
-- Excerpted from Chapter Two (pages 22-24)

Those who don’t have their heads buried in the proverbial sand are well aware of the split state of the American economy. Increasingly, the nation has been divided into a land of “haves” and “have nots” where the middle class is rapidly eroding. Proof of this phenomenon is in evidence at every turn, from the profusion of real estate foreclosures, to the record number of folks filing for bankruptcy, to the skyrocketing salaries of corporate executives coming at the expense of employee benefits, to the tumbling value of the dollar, to the outsourcing of manufacturing and jobs overseas.
This disturbing trend is not the natural consequence of an honestly-operating free market, but rather the result of a rigged form of capitalism in which the government is employed to ensure that the rich get richer, and the poor poorer. David Cay Johnston, a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter, delineates many ways in which the game has been fixed since the rise of Reagan Era in Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans enrich Themselves at Government Expense (and Stick You with the Bill).
According to the author, “The rich and their lobbyists have taken firm control of the levers of power in Washington and the state capitals while remaking the rules in their own interests.” That development explains why we have politicians willing to spend millions while running for offices which, theoretically, will only pay them a relatively-modest six-figure salary.
The book covers an impressive range of topics in the course of painting an overall picture of runaway greed gone hopelessly out of control, all with no restraints anywhere on the horizon. Johnston points out that the escalating situation is eerily similar to that which prevailed during the Roaring Twenties, just prior to the onset of Great Depression.
Labeling the country’s current predicament as a state of tyranny, given the flagrant abuses of authority, he concludes by calling for the masses to assert their sovereignty via a mandate to reinstate legitimate checks and balances. An excellent expose’ which deserves to be read by any concerned patriot hoping to help America avoid the impending financial collapse.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Don't Blame It on Rio: The Real Deal Behind Why Men Go to Brazil for Sex

by Jewel Woods and Karen Hunter
Grand Central Publishing
Hardcover, $23.99
304 pages
ISBN: 978-0-446-17806-3

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Black women were once at the center of black men’s lives, as wives, mothers, lovers and partners… However, in this generation, black women have become somewhat of a nuisance, a burden, and perhaps even a pariah in black men’s lives…
For the first time ever, large and growing numbers of black men have the option to ask what they perceive to be a legitimate question: Are black women necessary?
This book is not only going to deal with the question ‘Are black women necessary?’ It will also take a look at the broader question of why black men are looking for something they think is outside black women.”
Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 2-8)

Did you know that Brazil, the country with the largest concentration of people of African descent in the Western hemisphere, has become the favorite vacation destination of a rapidly-increasing number of professional black men? Apparently, they’re flocking to Rio de Janeiro for more than a little rest and relaxation on a sun-drenched beach.
The country is now also a popular port of call with bourgie brothers due to the easy availability of beautiful Brazilian women (“Halle Berry on steroids”) who don’t have the attitude or emotional baggage they generally find attached to sisters back at home. Some of them describe attaining “a level of physical and sexual intimacy, a sort of sexual healing, that they see as lacking in many of their current relationships with black women.” Consequently, they don’t mind having to venture to Rio de Janeiro repeatedly for “an experience that they think are denied them by black women in America.”
We have Jewel Woods and Pulitzer Prize-winner Karen Hunter to thank for blowing the covers off this clandestine sex trade currently flourishing in Brazil. For these two investigative journalists interviewed dozens of the peripatetic African-American men, many leading double lives, in preparation for co-writing Blame It on Rio, a rather revealing look at an emerging cultural phenomenon,.
And exactly why is this generation of black men with money so fond of Brazilian women? The authors blame a variety of contributing factors. First, the fact that they grew up watching hip-hop music on BET which groomed them to expect a rainbow coalition of gorgeous models eager to satisfy. And that utopian fantasy is just a plane ride away, since “Going to Rio is like walking into a rap video: scantily clad women, gyrating and fawning over every man in sight.”
Another factor is addressed by an African-American physician who found salvation in Rio from sisters’ bad attitudes in the States. He asks point blank, “Where else in the world is a black woman’s attitude accepted as the social norm, except in America?”
Next, the issue of anger is raised, with the observation that, “In complete contrast to the warm and affectionate demeanor of Latin American women, the most prominent characteristic of black women is anger.” Here, Woods and Hunter again blame the entertainment industry for causing black men to view their women with contempt by perpetuating the mammy stereotype by having “Tyler Perry, Martin Lawrence and Eddie Murphy “ put on a fatsuit and a dress to solidify “the image of the fat, loud, rude black woman.”
Other chapters explore widespread rejection of black women over their frigidity, obesity and Christianity. The participants in the project are so relentless and rabid on their indictment of the African-American female, I couldn’t help but pause periodically to wonder whether this was all a joke, since I’ve never previously heard anyone mention Rio as a sexual retreat.
Despite all of the dissing, the authors are ultimately optimistic about black male-female relationships, though they suggest that professional brothers are in dire need of an extreme makeover. They close with a list of “Ten Things Black Women Need and Want,” including understanding and truth.
A controversial expose’ about a shocking trend likely to divide and devastate the Hip Hop Generation along gender lines in the absence of constructive conversation capable of paving the path to honesty and reconciliation.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Ghetto Nation: A Journey into the Land of the Bling and the Home of the Shameless

by Cora Daniels
Doubleday
Hardcover, $23.95
222 pages
ISBN: 978-0-385-51643-3

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Ghetto no longer refers to where you live, it is how you live. It is a mind-set… a mind-set that thinks the M words -- monogamy and marriage – are bad language… a mind-set that thinks it is fine to bounce, baby, bounce in some video, as if that makes it different from performing such a display on a table, on a pole, on some john’s lap, or on the corner.
Most of all, ghetto is a mind-set that embraces the worst. It is the embodiment of expectations that have gotten dangerously too low.”
Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 5-6)

Have you ever visited the website Hot Ghetto Mess? (http://www.hotghettomess.com/hgm/index.asp) It’s a site dedicated to black bad taste which posts hilarious photos and videos of girls and guys gone ghetto. Now Cora Daniels has written a book about the troubling phenomenon in which she bemoans the fact that ghetto style is no longer limited to folks living in the slums.
Ms. Daniels, who herself lives in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, argues that ghetto is now a state of mind which has been exported to the mainstream with the help of gangsta rap videos. This entertaining tome is as funny as it is cautionary, points out plenty of indications that you know you’ve gone ghetto.
Some samples include wearing a do-rag to school or court, speaking grammatically incorrect English, sporting gold caps on your teeth, driving a pimped-out automobile, and using the N-word or ho. The author argues that the adherents of this lifestyle are selling themselves short, since one’s academic and employment prospects aren’t very good when you don’t aspire to be the best you can be.
Therefore, it’s no surprise to hear Daniels side with Bill Cosby against the Hip-Hop Generation in the African-American culture wars, although she makes a point of never blaming the poor for their plight. Thus, she studiously avoids the trap which snares so many conservative pawns seen as stigmatizing those unfortunates trapped in the neverending cycle of poverty.
Rather, Ghetto Nation’s primary thesis, convincingly articulated, equates ghetto with self hate because it typically inspires those degenerates stuck under its spell to embrace the lowest common denominator and to exhibit the worst of traits found in humanity.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Standing Tall: A Memoir of Tragedy and Triumph

by C. Vivian Stringer
Crown Publishers
Hardcover, $24.95
304 pages
ISBN: 978-0-307-40609-5

Book Review by Kam Williams

“As much as I love basketball… it has always been a vehicle for me to instill values and self-respect in the girls I coach… I am the last stop before the young women I coach take their place in society, and it is a responsibility I take seriously. My goal is to give them the confidence to dream big and the skills to overcome any challenges they face, whether it’s under the basket or in the boardroom.
For thirty years, my mission has been to create the next generation of leaders… My hope is that they will come to share my fundamental and unshakable faith: that each and every one of us has the ability to triumph in the face of adversity, to lift ourselves up and succeed, no matter what trials we encounter. It is a faith that has been tested many times in my own life.” -- Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 2)

When Don Imus referred to the young women on the Rutgers University Basketball Team as “nappy headed-hos” a year ago, it deeply affected their coach, Vivian Stringer. As she relates in her heartbreaking autobiography, she “couldn’t shake the feeling that I had fallen down in my responsibility to protect these girls.”
So, a couple of weeks later, with the media fallout still building in intensity, she called a press conference and then a meeting with Imus in defense of her student athletes who should’ve been celebrated instead of humiliated after their surprising run to the NCAA Championship game. What almost nobody knew is that while Stringer was in the limelight last April, she was also privately ecovering from breast cancer at the time. On top of that, her mother suffered a stroke in the midst of the unfortunate controversy.
Sadly, this was not the first time that Coach Stringer had been tested in this fashion. In 1981, her one year-old daughter Nina’s spinal meningitis had been misdiagnosed by a pediatrician as a common cold. Consequently, the baby would never be able to walk or talk. Then, in her early forties, Stringer was widowed when her husband died unexpectedly, leaving her to raise their three kids alone.
These are just a few of the host of woes visited upon the legendary college coach over the course of a terribly tragic life marked by a seemingly neverending series of tests of faith which reads a lot like the Biblical tale of Job. Poignantly written without a whit of bitterness, Standing Tall is as moving a memoir as I ever remember reading. The tears started flowing from the first page and didn’t stop till I finished the book.
Priceless pearls of emotional wisdom from a real role model eminently worth emulating.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Life as a Single Mom: It Isn’t Easy, or Is It?: 10 Steps to Achieving success as a Single Mom

by Stephanie M. Clark
MDK Media, Inc.
Paperback, $15.00
180 pages, illustrated
ISBN: 978-1-60402-447-0

Book Review by Kam Williams

“’Being a single mom isn’t easy,’ is something I hear constantly over and over throughout my travels, and I mostly hear it from people who are not single moms. It sometimes feels like they pity me and other single moms.
It is not that I haven’t gone through trials and tribulations. But… my struggles have never really been the result of being a single mom, but rather, choices I have made as a woman. This is why I have written this book. I want to empower single moms by giving them the tools to become fulfilled single women. And I want to enlighten people who tend to pity single moms.” -- Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 2-3)
According to the latest statistics, over 70% of all black children are born out of wedlock and about 80% will spend most of their childhood without a father figure in the house. This means that most of the child-raising in the African-American community will continue for the foreseeable future to fall on the shoulders of the black woman.
For this reason, of them a book like Life as a Single Mom is arriving at an optimal moment in history, given that it was written by a seasoned single mom of 15 years. Stephanie Clark is also the founder of My Daughter’s Keeper, a non-profit organization created “to provide support and resources to mothers/caregivers and daughters (ages 8-19).”
Not only is Ms. Clark a single mom herself, but she was the youngest of 13 kids raised by a single mother. Part of the author’s purpose in writing this valuable how-to handbook is to help the next generation end the self-destructive cycle of babies making babies which has ensnared many a family for as long as any of its members can remember.
Besides sharing her own and her mom’s personal tales of survival, Clark calls upon dozen of friends, colleagues and acquaintances to relate their case histories in a free flowing anecdotal fashion. What the women appear to have in common is that rather than seeking sympathy for the hard road they’ve had to walk without a partner, they simply seem to want to announce triumphantly how they have sacrificed, persevered and flourished in spite of the often daunting odds.
Still, some of the stories will tug at your heartstrings, such as the sister whose much older boyfriend, now incarcerated, “impregnated me on purpose,” even though “he already had two children.” Just as unfortunate is the plight of the pregnant teenager whose baby-daddy reacted to the news that he was going to be a father by saying, “he felt sorry for me because I hadn’t lived and I was going to miss out on life.”
Yet, these same strong females don’t seem at all bitter about having been abandoned, most without any help in the way of child support or shared custody. And they have sound advice about how to avoid landing in their predicament.
Basically, it amounts to the age-old maxim “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”
However, accidents will continue to happen because girls will be girls, if you can believe a quote cited in the book claiming that a woman’s sexual appetite is four times that of a man’s. That’s where Ms. Clark’s “10 Steps to Achieving Success as a Single Mom” come into play.
In the end, most of the tome’s contributors credit God for filling the void left by their absentee sperm donors. Typical spiritual comments read like this entry by the author’s mom, Elsie Robertson: “You may think you are alone to raise your children, but you are not alone. Just remember that God is always with you and He will help you raise your children.”
Amen.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Wrong on Race: The Democratic Party’s Buried Past

by Bruce Bartlett
Palgrave Macmillan
Hardcover, $26.95
284 pages
ISBN: 978-0-230-60062-1

Book Review by Kam Williams

“It must be acknowledged that in the progress of nations Negroes have shown less capacity for government than any other race of people. No independent government of any form has ever been successful in their hands. On the contrary, whenever they have been left to their own devices they have shown a constant tendency to relapse into barbarism…
Of all the dangers which our nation has yet encountered, none are equal to those which must result from the success of the effort now making to Africanize the half of our country.”
 President Andrew Johnson, State of the Union Address (1867)

Although the Democratic Party has come to be associated with
liberal politics and thus embraced by African-Americans over the past 40 years or so, this hasn’t always been the case. In fact, for most of its history, the party created by Thomas Jefferson has been uniformly racist and right-wing.
Despite being famous for coining the phrase, “All men are created equal,” Jefferson also asserted that blacks “are inferior to the whites in the endowments both of body and mind.” The hypocritical third President of the United States went on to allege that “They secrete less by the kidneys, and more by the glands of the skin, which gives them a very strong and disagreeable odor... They require less sleep… They are more ardent after their female: but love seems with them to be more an eager desire, than a tender delicate mixture of sentiment and sensation… In general… they are dull, tasteless, and anomalous.”
This bigoted Founding Father is credited with formulating “the most intense, extensive and extreme” anti-black thought of the post-Revolutionary Era.” So, it should come as no surprise that in his will he chose to free only 5 of his 200+ slaves after his death. Subsequent Democratic presidents were just as intolerant. For instance, plantation owner Andrew Jackson saw slavery as “the necessary foundation” of American civilization, if whites were to maintain their quality of life economically.
When James K. Polk took over the White House in 1845, he fired the existing domestic and kitchen staff and replaced them with slaves. Politically, Polk declared in his 1848 Statue of the Union Address that Congress had no power to end slavery. This attitude was later only rubber-stamped by fellow Democrat James Buchanan who, in 1857, hailed the Dred Scott Decision with, “Had it been decided that either Congress or the territorial legislature possess the power to annul or impair the right to property in slaves, the evil would be intolerable.”
The very next year, during the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates, Democrat Stephen A. Douglas argued,

“I hold that a Negro is not and never ought to be a citizen of the United States. I hold that this government was made… by the white men, for the benefit of white men and their posterity forever, and should be administered by white men and none others. I do not believe that the Almighty made the Negro capable of self-government… In my opinion, the signers of the Declaration of Independence had no reference to whatever to the Negro when they declared all men to have been created equal… thus, my friends, I am in favor of preserving the government on the white basis as our fathers made it.”

Many forget how Republican Abraham Lincoln’s ill-advised choice of a Democrat as a running mate in 1864 gave John Wilkes Booth a good excuse to assassinate him For upon assuming the presidency, Andrew Johnson immediately began doing his best to ruin the Reconstruction effort by vetoing the Civil Rights Act and by repealing the Freedmen’s Bureau legislation guaranteeing each ex-slave 40 acres and a mule.
Worse, he allowed the Southern states to pass the repressive Jim Crow laws prohibiting blacks from voting, holding office, marrying whites, and so forth. With African-Americans denied the vote, this signaled the demise of the Republican Party in the region, leading to the notion of the Solid South, meaning solidly Democratic. With no checks or balances, the next 100 years would be marked by widespread lynching, vigilantism and the rise of the Ku Klux Klan.
Speaking of the Klan, did you know that Harry Truman joined it in 1924? Wrong on Race: The Democratic Party’s Buried Past by Bruce Bartlett is stocked with tons of such shocking tidbits. And while this illuminating tome might not make you shift your allegiance to the Republicans this election season, at the very least it ought to make you question the wisdom of remaining reflexively loyal to a party which has never officially apologized for its checkered past.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Get Real, Get Rich: Conquer the 7 Lies Blocking You from Success

by Dr. Farrah Gray
Dutton
Hardcover, $24.95
270 pages
ISBN: 978-0-525-95044-8

Book Review by Kam Williams

“News flash: There’s no such thing as automatic wealth -- at least not in the real world. Of course some people will have you believe that wealth starts with a way of thinking and then moves effortlessly toward real wealth.
In this book I challenge you to move beyond the conversation and really grab at your accomplishments. I’m not only going to share the mindset you need to achieve all that you dream of, but also the specific strategies that accompany that state of mind...
What’s holding you back? The answer to that question is what this book is about… You might be oblivious to the fears and fallacies that are thwarting you financially, spiritually, emotionally, and even physically… I want to help you marshal out your own wealth potential, which relates to everything about you – not just your bank account.”
 Excerpted from the Introduction (pages xxii-xxiii)

Thanks in part to Oprah Winfrey’s stamp of approval, The Secret has been enjoying a phenomenally run and is still sitting high on most best seller lists a couple of years after its 2006 release. That popular self-help book’s basic thesis is that positive thinking alone is enough to attract all the wealth, health and happiness you want. If only it were just that simple.
As a skeptic who questions the wisdom of relying on that philosophy, I’d guess that a lot more is probably involved in achieving one’s dreams than a mere attitude readjustment. So, I suspect that there are many devotees with buyer’s remorse who find themselves frustrated that the money hasn’t simply come pouring in after they adopted the mindset dictated by The Secret.
I digress at the outset only to contrast the approach of The Secret with that of Get Real, Get Rich. I call this refreshing alternative The Un-Secret, since its strategies are grounded in a reality-based recipe for success which is a combination of not only attitude but also skills and commitment.
Written by “Reallionaire” Dr. Farrah Gray, this relatively-feasible how-to guide is designed to empower individuals to maximize their potential, whatever that may be. However, in Dr. Gray’s opinion, this involves much more than chanting positive affirmations. So expect to do some serious work along the path to fulfilling your goals.
You might be wondering, Why should I listen to this author as opposed to the countless others offering advice about how to get rich? Perhaps because he speaks from experience. Afterall, he was raised in the ghetto on the South Side of Chicago by a single-mom, yet he still overcame the odds and made his first million dollars by the age of 14.
And as fascinating as this admirable wunderkind’s personal story is, it’s the practical ideas shared in Get Real, Get Rich which make the book worthwhile. For Farrah, now 23, exhibits a wisdom beyond his years, and an infectious eagerness to inspire others to outdo him in terms of achievement.
For example, in a chapter entitled, The Money Lie, he emphasizes the importance of living below your means, in order to avoid going broke. While that sage insight might seem to some like common sense, taking the notion to heart is likely to make all the difference in your life.
What can I say about this exceptional role model except “I’m a believer!”

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Black Pain: It Just Looks Like We’re Not Hurting

by Terrie M. Williams
Simon & Schuster
Hardcover, $25.00
374 pages
ISBN: 978-0-7432-9882-7

Book Review by Kam Williams

“How much does suffering from and living with addiction, incarceration, dirty neighborhoods, HIV, hypertension, violence, racism, and class discrimination make us vulnerable to depression in the Black community? How many of us are suffering from it and not able or willing to acknowledge it? Who is talking about it? What is our response? The silence is deafening…
Depression is a fact of Black life, but it doesn’t have to be a curse. And we don’t have to be ashamed to admit it. This book will speak openly about my own depression and share the experiences of other people, from celebrities to regular working folk, so that we can think in different ways about this condition – and about our options as Black people for dealing with it. More than anything, I want to open a dialogue. I want to give a voice to our pain and name it so we can make a space for our healing.” -- Excerpted from the Introduction (pages xxvi-xxvii)
African-American females are generally undervalued by this society, despite all the selfless sacrifices they routinely make at home, at work and in the community. Besides being overworked, they’re expected to behave like ever-available, accommodating sex machines or else risk being dismissed as undesirable and unfeminine.
Black men, meanwhile, have a host of their own pressures. Pigeonholed as dangerous, aggressive and angry, they have come to compensate for this stereotype by carefully cultivating a disarmingly cool, above-it-all demeanor. And, instead of developing a “language to talk about painful emotions,” most adopt a super-macho mask to survive.
Apparently, neither brothers nor sisters think of themselves as entitled even to feel their emotional pain, much less address it. This is the thesis postulated by Terrie M. Williams in Black Pain: It Just Looks Like We’re Not Hurting. Ms. Williams, a licensed clinical social worker, opens her groundbreaking text with a revealing discussion of her own bottoming-out following years as a highly-functioning workaholic plunged deeply in denial about her depression. The author subsequently supplements that very personal story with empathetic illustrations of additional case histories of what she argues amounts to an unspoken epidemic currently raging in black America.
By book’s end, Ms. Williams is most persuasive, and achieves her basic aim, namely, to acknowledge that life is hard in the ‘hood, that people are suffering from depression as a consequence, and that the time has arrived to remove the stigma in the community still attached to seeking out psychological help. A convincing call for African-Americana to trade in a harmful cultural stoicism for some overdue mental health treatment.

Monday, February 4, 2008

A Bound Man: Why We Are Excited about Obama And Why He Can’t Win

by Shelby Steele
Free Press
Hardcover, $22.00
158 pages
ISBN: 978-1-4165-5917-7

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Louis Armstrong adapted a mask that came out of the black minstrel tradition… It communicated to white audiences that Louis Armstrong would entertain them but not presume to be their equal. The relentlessly beaming smile, the handkerchief dabbing away the sweat, the reflexive bowing, the exaggerated humility and graciousness- all this signaled that he would not breach the manners of segregation, the propriety that required him to be both cheerful and less than fully human…
What is exceptional about Barack Obama is the same thing that was exceptional about Louis Armstrong. Neither man discovered a new way for society to racially arrange itself. But both men found a way to capture the goodwill of whites in a way that facilitated their lives and careers.” -- Excerpted from pages 61 and 127.
Only last year, I saw a movie in which characters seriously speculated about whether the United States would elect a robot or a black President first. Regardless of the answer, the intended message was that the country was nowhere near ready to vote for an African-American.
Nevertheless, Barack Obama has managed to mount a competitive campaign for the Democratic nomination. And, should he succeed in defeating Hillary Clinton in that endeavor, the only question left will be whether he can win in November.
Already weighing-in with an answer is Professor Shelby Steele, public intellectual, black conservative and author of such books as The Content of Our Character and White Guilt. Steele, like Obama, has a black father and a white mother, so he presumes to understand Barack’s mindset better than most of us.
It is his contention that the Junior Senator cannot ascend to the presidency because he is a two-faced phony, since “he cannot be himself without hurting himself politically.” According to Steele, “With blacks he is a protester carrying forward the care’s cause; with whites he is the ‘one people’ unifier, minimizing the importance of racial difference.”
Consequently, he’s a “bound man,” a hypocritical opportunist more interested in exploiting the status quo “to move himself ahead, not to advance a new configuration of race relations.” Certainly, such incendiary allegations would be easier to stomach if it weren’t coming from an African-American who’s also a darling of the right-wing Republican Establishment.
That being said, the book does offer an intriguing theory about a dilemma faced by blacks trying to assimilate into the mainstream. It claims that African-Americans seeking such success must adopt one of two masks: either that of “The Bargainer” or that of “The Challenger.”
Bargainers strike this deal with white society: “I will not use America’s horrible history of white racism against you, if you will promise not to use my race against me.” Examples Steele gives of Bargainers are Colin Powell and Oprah Winfrey.
Challengers, by contrast, leverage guilt to get power, indicting whites as inherently racist “until they do something to prove otherwise. The author says Reverends Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are your average Challengers.
The problem for Obama, and why he can never become President, supposedly, is that he behaves like a Bargainer, a latter-day Satchmo, in front of whites, but more like a challenger when trying to appease blacks. In sum, Shelby Steele makes a persuasive case in A Bound Man, yet in my mind there remains the distinct possibility that there might be a third type of black person, and maybe that’s precisely why so many folks of every hue find something about Barack so appealing.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Why Black People Can't Lose Weight: The Psychology, The Challenge, and The Solution to Overall Wellness

by Makeisha Lee
AuthorHouse
Paperback, $14.99
172 pages, illustrated
ISBN: 978-1-4343-4738-1

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Weight loss. Why is it such a vicious circle? Why does it seem unattainable for us as a community, despite the hundreds of diet plans available? Why do we as Blacks lead in the highest percentage of obesity cases in all gender, age and ethnic groups to date? These questions deserve convincing and satisfying answers…
In this book, we will answer all the questions you may have had unanswered before… in a clear, concise manner without getting too technical… This written work of art will reveal all the hidden schemes that mainstream society has kept from us, and break it down so that a 3 year-old can understand why we as Blacks have been unsuccessful as a whole at getting and/or keeping the weight off.”
Excerpted from the Prelude (pages xiii-xiv)

After the annual eating season which starts with Thanksgiving and doesn’t end until somewhere around January 1st, most of us put losing weight high on our list of New Year’s resolutions. If you are one of those people who’s always fighting the battle of the bulge, perhaps the problem has to do with more than merely how much food is on your diet.
This is the contention of Makeisha Lee who believes that “We cannot even begin to confront obesity and/or its related illnesses without first addressing the toxicity in our bodies that exists.” Ms. Lee, a nutritional advisor and nationally-syndicated writer, has conducted extensive researcher in the field of alternative health. And in her new book, Why Black People Can't Lose Weight, she sets out a straightforward formula for overcoming obesity.
First, she informs us that “the food industry devises deliberate strategies to get people to eat more food,” most of which have been processed and stripped of “98% of the natural nutrition.” The author also says that not only are these refined foods addictive, but they are of no nutritional value.
Ms. Lee goes on to discuss why a variety of conventional approaches to weight loss simply don’t work, before suggesting a carefully-conceived, complex regimen combining internal cleansing with whole and organic foods, vitamins and supplements, and aerobic exercise and strength training. She refers to nutritional cleansing as the missing link and the “ultimate solution to helping Blacks reclaim their throne to a higher health status and lose weight.”
Well-crafted and convincing, Why Black People Can't Lose Weight offers a revolutionary, step-by-step approach to health aimed at changing the body by first eliminating destructive attitudes about dieting from the mind.

To order a copy of Why Black People Can't Lose Weight, visit: http://www.authorhouse.com/bookstore/ItemDetail~bookid~48825.aspx
Or call: (888) 519-5121

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Why African-Americans Can't Get Ahead: And How We Can Solve It with Group Economics

by Gwen Richardson
Cushcity Communications
Paperback, $14.95
174 pages, illustrated
ISBN: 978-0-9800250-1-9

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Unemployment rates for African-Americans have historically been twice as high as for white Americans… and the plight of young black males is even worse, especially in the country’s inner cities… An even more telling statistic shows that less than 1 per cent of jobs held by African-Americans are created by African-Americans. In other words, we are literally dependent upon other groups for our very livelihoods.
Further, the problems facing the African-American community are no longer on the political radar screen… Political leaders have made appeals to the federal government to solve these problems, but after 40 years of persistently high unemployment rates and repeated studies showing little improvement, it is incumbent upon African-Americans to identify solutions and reverse this trend ourselves.
If African-Americans are to be treated as a group, we might as well act as one where economics is concerned. Practicing group economics, making a conscious decision to spend a significant percentage of our dollars within our community so long-term jobs can be created for our children and grandchildren is the only way to reverse this disastrous trend.”
Excerpted from the Introduction (pages xx-xxi)

Why is it that blacks have lagged behind most other American ethnic groups in terms of economic progress? According to Gwen Richardson, the key to financial success might lie in unity, a willingness to patronize black-owned businesses. As proof, she points to the success of Jews, Asians, Haitians, West Indians, Arabs and even gays, all minorities much smaller in size than the 40 million who comprise the African-American segment of the population.
Each of those other groups has nonetheless flourished by maintaining a cultural identity, rather than exercising the option “to fully assimilate into American society.” Consequently, not only are they able to take a measure of “pride in being a closed society,” but they are simultaneously able to keep capital in their communities and thereby build an array of flourishing financial institutions.

In Why African-Americans Can't Get Ahead, Ms. Richardson makes a passionate appeal for a collective black mindset in terms of money matters. And, in numerous case studies, she eloquently illustrates why she feels this approach is imperative, such as in her discussion of how Koreans came to control the bulk of hair care supply stores in black communities all across the country.
The author, a graduate of Georgetown University with a B.S. degree in marketing, is not just some ivory-tower intellectual with impractical Pan-African notions. No, she bases the ideas in this, her first book, on her practical experience of 20 years spent as an entrepreneur, which included co-founding with her husband, Willie, Cushcity.com, the largest African-American internet retailer.
Why African-Americans Can't Get Ahead, an eye-opening game plan for advancement, offers some cutting-edge, 21st Century solutions for the host of persistent economic woes still plaguing the bulk of the black community despite the considerable inroads made since the Sixties in terms of integration and basic civil rights.

To order a copy of Why African-Americans Can't Get Ahead, visit: www.groupeconomics.com
Or call: (800) 340-5454

Monday, January 7, 2008

Don't Let "It" Get You

Don't Let "It" Get You:
An Empowering Health and Fitness Guide for Women
by Joy Ohayia
iUniverse
Paperback, $14.95
156 pages, illustrated
ISBN: 978-0-595-46709-9

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Success means nothing, if we are not healthy enough to enjoy it. I urge you to make your health a priority… This book’s premise is to inspire you to go after your dreams despite the ‘Its’ that stand in your way. Stay focused, stay motivated, and if no one supports you, I support you in your quest for a fit and healthy life.” -- Excerpted from the Postscript (page 137)
Do you have a litany of excuses to explain why you haven’t yet gotten what you want in life? Motivator Joy Ohayia refers to these reasons as your “Its.” Generally, most of us place the blame for our failure to achieve a goal on such common “Its” as not having enough time or money, being burdened by stress, the demands of family or friends, or pressures from work.
Ms. Ohayia speaks from experience, having stuck with a good-paying job she hated just for the money. She also blamed her 70-pound weight gain on her second pregnancy. So, it was almost a blessing when Joy was eventually fired from her cushy, if soul-draining, position after 20 years spent climbing the corporate ladder, because soon thereafter she turned her passion, fitness, into her profession by opening up her own health club for women.
So, not only did this nationally-ranked sprinter manage to lose all the baby fat and get back into game shape, but she kickstarted a new career which was far more fulfilling than anything she could do sitting at a desk in a cubicle. Still, this was no easy decision to make for an academically-accomplished mother of two with a bachelor’s degree in engineering from Stony Brook and a master’s in math and statistics from Rutgers.
Fortunately, her trademarked, body image system, QuantumQuest, proved to be so popular with members of her female-only fitness center that she decided to write a book in order to share her program with any woman in need of a personal trainer. The upshot is Don't Let "It" Get You, a handy how-to tome which is part personal memoir, part pep talk, part precise training regimen, complete with helpful charts and illustrations of exercise positions.
Her approach is a sensible combination of positive thinking, natural dieting, relaxation, cardiovascular activity, and muscle and strength conditioning individually-tailored to one’s body type and tolerance for pain. Does it work? Judging by the rather unflattering “Before” pictures and the solid as a rock “After” snapshots of herself the author includes as Exhibit A, QuantumQuest certainly gets this critic’s stamp of approval, though results my vary.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

The Disilgold Way

Countdown 101: From Writer to Self Publisher
by Heather Covington
1st Books Library
Paperback, $22.95
404 pages
ISBN: 978-1-4140-2218-2

Book Review by Kam Williams

“After starting a business proposal that took over 10 years, as long as it took to finally self publish my first book, I knew that I needed to be brave, and tear it to pieces to start all over. There were too many unnecessary steps that I had read in books on becoming a self publisher and a publisher of other authors’ books.
Now my mission is clearer and I have been able to self publish over 10 books in less than 3 years despite conventional methods, and I feel that I have finally freed my soul! It is a feeling I long to share with new writers who want to self publish their books and, most of all, enjoy the process.”
-- Excerpted from the Preface (page v)

Although I’ve attained a certain stature as a syndicated journalist, I must confess to being unable to interest a publisher in either of the two books I’ve completed. Despite dutifully following the suggestions delineated in Writer’s Market, widely accepted as the bible of struggling authors, all I have to show for my efforts to date is a big pile of rejection letters from publishers and agents.
Now, after reading The Disilgold Way, I can quite confidently say that my fate would have been far better had I simply internalized its relatively-practical ideas instead. For this handy how-to guide demystifies self publishing, convincingly presenting this path as an accessible and attractive alternative for those frustrated by failure with big-name commercial houses.
This user-friendly text is the brainchild of Heather Covington, a very successful self publisher in her own right. Out of her own home in New York City, this grade school teacher-turned-author/CEO has built her own publishing and publicity empire, plus a mammoth online network.
From her down-to-earth yet confident tone, it is easy to discern that Heather knows what she’s talking about. Why re-invent the wheel through via trial-and-error, if you can learn what you need to know from an altruistic literary diva’s account of her firsthand experience. She spares you her headaches by describing all the pitfalls of striking out on your own as a writer.
This 400+ page opus is packed with plenty of pep talks and priceless practical advice about everything from how to buy an ISBN # to how to copyright your manuscript to how to market it. Regardless of what area the author’s covering, the approach is influenced by her “5 Principles of Success,” namely, Integrity, Quality, Professionalism, Service and Dedication to One’s Mission Statement.
Because Ms. Covington is a writer at heart, much of what she has to say is likely to resonate with those wishing to follow in her footsteps. For instance, she indicates that one of the benefits of controlling your own career is that you won’t be pressured by a publisher to travel around the country to promote a book.
“Do the math!” she urges. “Once you’ve booked that out of town flight, paid for lodging, food and in town traveling expenses, chances are you’ve just zapped your potential profits.” Furthermore, “Writers want to write, not have to travel all around the world to acquire sales.”
A self-help treatise that might make the perfect stocking stuffer for the aspiring author in your life.

To order a copy of The Disilgold Way, or to check out the poetry, novels and the other non-fiction titles by the prolific Heather Covington, visit: http://www.heather-covington.com/podbooksmediakit.html

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Kwanzaa: From Holiday to Everyday

A Complete Guide for Making Kwanzaa a Part of Your Life
by Maitefa Angaza
Dafina Books
Paperback, $14.00
282 pages, illustrated
ISBN: 978-0-7582-1665-6

Book Review by Kam Williams

“One of the reasons Kwanzaa has been widely embraced is that it speaks directly to the need many feel for a self-determining way of engaging the world. In observing a holiday created by a man of African ancestry as a contribution to his people and to the world, we claim the hard-won freedoms paid for by the sacrifices of all our forebears…
At Kwanzaa time we look within to determine where we are on our life’s journey, where we stand in relation to our community, and what we’ve done to advance those values we hold highest. We do this both singularly, in the sanctuary of our quiet moments, and together with family, friends, and colleagues during joyous celebrations.
These private and public reflections help us to set our compasses for the year ahead; although our mistakes may give pause, when contemplating our blessings, we give thanks.”
-- Excerpted from Chapter One (pages 9 & 13)

Created by Dr. Ron Karenga in 1966, Kwanzaa was conceived with the hope that black people would explore “the rich resources of traditional African culture and ethics in their quest for liberated minds and lives.” Very much a child of the Civil Rights Movement, the new holiday was initially met with considerable resistance due to its then being viewed as a Pan African alternative to Christmas, given that it was celebrated during the same season, between December 26th and January 1st.
However, over the intervening years, Kwanzaa has not only been embraced by millions of African-Americans but come to be recognized by the mainstream culture. For instance, in 1997, the U.S. Postal Service issued its first postal stamp commemorating the holiday, and it has since been positively acknowledged by President Bush in a supportive Kwanzaa message. (http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/12/20041223-2.html) Plus, there’s now “the Spirit of Kwanzaa,” an annual event staged at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.
So, it only makes sense that a how-to guide like Kwanzaa: From Holiday to Everyday would come along. Written by Maitefa Angaza, the Managing Editor of African Voices, a black literary magazine, this handy guide explains every aspect of Kwanzaa, from its African roots, to its seven principles, to the ceremony, songs and feast, including recipes.
While you might be unfamiliar with many of the African dishes, which have been culled from such countries as Cameroon, Zanzibar and Senegal, the instructions seem straightforward enough that you might enjoy making something unfamiliar to your palate. Otherwise, there are traditional West Indian and Southern soul food staples to pick from, including Caribbean rice and peas, sweet potato pone, collard greens, macaroni salad, cornbread and biscuits.
Though it might be worth the investment for that chapter alone, this is far more than a cookbook. The author’s aim is not only to encourage folks to observe Kwanzaa during the seven days of the holiday’s season, but also to inspire observers to keep it alive year-round by finding ways to put the seven principles (Unity, Self-Determination, Collective Work and Responsibility, Cooperative Economics, Purpose, Creativity and Faith) into practice on a daily basis.
A valuable resource for both novice and veteran Kwanzaa keepers!

Saturday, December 8, 2007

The 10 Best Black Books of 2007

by Kam Williams

Looking back on the best books I read this past year by African-Americans, the only thing they seem to have in common is their daring in terms of a willingness to tackle material from an unorthodox point of view. This refreshing inclination reflects the fact that black thinking has become less and less a predictable, monolithic mindset and is increasingly represented by a variety of novel perspectives.
For instance, in Pimps Up, Ho's Down, rap fan T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting confesses to being conflicted about how the music she was raised on has influenced the thinking and behavior of females of the Hip-Hop Generation.
In Lose Your Mother, Saidiya Hartman writes about her disappointing year spent in the Motherland during which she discovered herself to be more American than African.
And how about Sonsyrea Tate’s revealing memoir, Do Me Twice, in which she shares the often shocking details about being raised inside the Nation of Islam? While sisters do dominate the list, there are several brothers who have distinguished themselves, such as Bill Cosby and Dr. Alvin F. Poussaint with Come on People, their controversial clarion call for self-help and personal responsibility.
In an entirely different vein, we have photographer Jerry Taliaferro’s Women of a New Tribe, a tasteful, black & white celebration of the black female via portraits posed in the glamorous style of screen divas from the Forties. Meanwhile, Harriet Washington’s meticulously-researched Medical Apartheid shed some light on America’s discriminatory healthcare system.
As you can see that the entries covering a wide range of subjects. So, without further ado, I give you this critic’s picks as the best non-fiction books published by black authors in 2007.


10 Best Black Books of 2007

1. Pimps Up, Ho's Down: Hip Hop’s Hold on Young Black Women
by T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting

In the wake of Don Imus being fired and rehired for his insensitive
comments about black women, you probably couldn’t ask for a more timely discussion of gangsta rap and its demeaning depictions of females. Highly recommended as a seminal tome likely to usher in a promising new era of honest intellectual debate about the imminent head-on collision between hip-hop and emerging, black feminist thinking.

2. Lose Your Mother: A Journey along the Atlantic Slave Route
by Saidiya Hartman

Written in a most engaging fashion, this thought-provoking, post-sentimental, and ultimately heartbreaking neo-narrative, if embraced, is likely to lead to an overhaul in Pan-Africanist thinking. For the fundamental question repeatedly raised here by implication is whether African-Americans are more African than American or vice versa. And Saidaya provides plenty of anecdotal evidence to support her thesis that the latter just might be the answer.

3. Come on People: On the Path from Victims to Victors
by Bill Cosby and Alvin F. Poussaint, M.D.

Ever since Bill Cosby delivered what might be called the historic Ghettoesburg Address in Washington, D.C. during the NAACP’s commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the landmark Brown vs. Board of Education decision, there’s been a big brouhaha brewing in the black community over his oft-repeated remarks. In a cultural war, you have to pick a side, and I suspect that most parents who truly love their children will consider straight talk of this nature not only appropriate but downright necessary in the face of the degeneracy directed daily at African-American youth in the battle for their bodies and minds.

4. Women of a New Tribe: A Photographic Celebration of the Black Woman
By Jerry Taliaferro

This groundbreaking photographic collection features a rainbow of African-American females, not just in terms of skin color, but also in shape, size and age. And we don’t just see sisters who meet a shallow, narrowly-defined, Eurocentric standard of beauty. A timely and overdue homage, indeed, which wonderfully elevates and illustrates both the inner and outer beauty of all sisters, a segment of society generally taken for granted, if not denigrated by the mainstream culture.

5. Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present
by Harriet A. Washington

Most people only think of the infamous Tuskegee study of subjects with untreated syphilis when it comes to the exploitation of blacks as guinea pigs. But such experimentation by medical researchers neither began nor ended with that shocking case. This chilling expose’ makes it abundantly clear that just as America has a two-tiered criminal justice system, it has totally different quality healthcare systems when it comes to its blacks and white citizens.

6. Do Me Twice: My Life after Islam: A Memoir
by Sonsyrea Tate

Until the age of 18, Sonsyrea Tate was essentially raised in the Nation of Islam, which apparently proved to be very confusing for a child who first had it ingrained in her head that all white people were devils, before being taught that they’re not devils, and then, oops, they were in fact devils after all. But apparently far more damaging than the dogma was the hypocrisy young Ray-Ray witnessed in her family members and other disciples whose behavior bore little resemblance to what was dictated by the Koran. A poignant page-turner offering an insider’s view from behind the veil.

7. Saving the Race: Empowerment through Wisdom
Daily Affirmations for Young Black Males
by Anthony Asadullah Samad

If one is to believe the dire statistics, African-American men are an at-risk segment of the population, and in acute crisis due to skyrocketing incarceration, dropout, unemployment, HIV infection, drug addiction and homicide rates. This book is a collection of inspirational affirmations aimed at young black males culled from a variety of sources, including the Bible, African proverbs, and dozens of different luminaries like Martin Luther King, Gandhi, Malcolm X, Bill Cosby, Oprah Winfrey, and Muhammad Ali. A worthwhile opus which ought to serve as a regular reminder to impressionable young minds to resist negative influences as they strive for success in their every endeavor.

8. Broken Utterances:
A Selected Anthology of 19th Century Black Women’s Social Thought
Edited and Illustrated by Michelle Diane Wright

For too long, the unique perspective of the African-American female has languished in the shadows of intellectual thought. This treatise lays the groundwork for a long overdue appreciation of a score of visionary sisters who were ready to lead their people over a hundred years ago. An admirable, exhaustive, encyclopedic effort to elevate these brave women, even if belatedly, to their rightful place as very important voices in the black struggle for freedom.

9. We Gotta Have It:
Twenty Years of Seeing Black at the Movies, 1986-2006
by Esther Iverem

Worth the investment for the opening chapter alone, in which the author assesses the predicament of blacks in the U.S. through the prism of motion pictures. There, she asks, “Why does a police officer feel he can get away with sodomizing us with a broomstick; shooting us, as we stand unarmed, forty or fifty times; or beating us bloody on a crowded New Orleans street?”
She concludes it is “the least attractive, the most criminal, the most seedy part of us, that is then made to become representative of us all.” A cultural critic who can skewer so succinctly and delightfully is rare enough indeed, but when you couple that talent with an uncompromising, unique black feminist perspective, now you’re talking about a sister with a seminal voice deserving of much wider recognition.

10. The Revolution Will Not Be Funded:
Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex
Edited by Incite! Women of Color against Violence

Have you ever wondered why poverty persists in America, despite the
existence of so many incredibly wealthy charitable organizations, some of which boast billion-dollar endowments? This incendiary collection of essays brilliantly blows the covers off the non-profit racket, indicting it as being in bed with a power elite whose primary interest is in maintaining the status quo.
Apparently, many charities even masquerade as progressive while pushing an arch-conservative agenda. In sum, the sisters behind this enlightening expose’ earn high marks for compiling a critical inquiry into an unregulated industry long-presumed to be dedicated to the public interest, which unfortunately, more often than not, ostensibly functions as a pawn of big business and the ruling class.

Honorable Mention

Ralph Ellison: A Biography
by Arnold Rampersad

Supreme Discomfort:
The Divided Soul of Clarence Thomas
by Kevin Merida and Michael A. Fletcher

Campus CEO:
The Student Entrepreneur’s Guide to Launching
a Multimillion-Dollar Business
by Randal Pinkett

Crisis of the Black Intellectual
by W.D. Wright

You Have Cancer:
A Death Sentence That Four African-American Men Turned into
an Affirmation to Remain in the “Land of the Living”
by Ronald P. Bazile, Sr., Ellis M. Brossett, Sr., Preston J. Edwards, Sr. and Benjamin M. Priestley

Cooked:
From the Streets to the Stove, from Cocaine to Foie Gras
by Chef Jeff Henderson

Billionaire Baby:
How to Make Your Child Rich & Famous
by Emory Drake

Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire
Book II: Origin of Civilization from the Cushites
by Drusilla Dunjee Houston
Edited by Dr. Peggy Brooks Bertram

Sucka Free Love:
How to Avoid Dating The Dumb, The Deceitful, The Dastardly,
The Dysfunctional, and The Deranged
By Deborrah Cooper

In-Dependence from Bondage
Claude McKay and Michael Manley:
Defying the Ideological Clash and Policy Gaps
In African Diaspora Relations
by Lloyd D. McCarthy

Grace After Midnight
A Memoir
by Felicia “Snoop” Pearson
with David Ritz

Fishing for Love on the Net:
A Guide to Those Searching for Love
by Myles Reed, Jr.

African American History for Dummies
by Ronda Racha Penrice
Wiley Publishing, Inc.