African-American Books
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What I Didn't KnowReview Date: 2008-10-06
Interesting book,Review Date: 2008-09-07
Painful TruthReview Date: 2008-09-01
Presumed Consent - De Corpe Gettin' de Shaft - Grave Robbing!Review Date: 2008-06-30
So now I understand why all the teaching hospitals are generally in poor black neighborhoods. By locating these areas, medical staff have a unlimited supply of people to use as guinea pigs.
I thought this book was fascinating, and I would absolutely recommend. However, she contradicts herself quite often. She is telling us about all the experimentation and abuse of black Americans and their African slave ancestors. She even said something to the effect that the experimentation and abuse doesn't occur anymore. Yet she discuss several relatively recent experiments and clinical trials. So it is like she giving me the a fantastic dinner and telling me it's poison, but then setting a plate before me to eat.
I find Ms. Washington to be quite contradictory and annoying at times. The following made me say huh:
"I am in no way suggesting that this predominance of black body parts was deliberately engineered, but the confluence of presumed consent statues and the appearance of black homicide victims on coroner's tables explains why their organs and tissue dominates body part scandals." She annoys me. Why is she stating a fact, then backing down.
This is what she said in the previous paragraph to the statement above::
"Legal bias also exist in the form of presumed consent statutes, which were enacted in the 1980s to increased the number of organs donated for transplantation and research via various presumed consent statutes, which presumed that the descendent would want to donate his body parts."
Oh hell naw, if I ain't signing nothin', I aint donating squat. I have told my family I am not donating nada. They know. So how can the government presume anything. This is fraud. This medical apartheid.
Ms. Washington continues with "Many blacks do not wish to donate their bodies or body parts. Only 5 percent of Black Americans surveyed by DePaul law professor Michele Goodwin considered presumed consent a legitimate source of body parts. Eighty six percent of blacks she surveyed thought presumed consent should be illegal." It is blacks who organs and tissue are most likely to be appropriated via presumed consent by coroners after autopsy."
"There is no such entity as a crack baby. - Washington
"Birth control & abortion are turning out to be a matter of Eugenics steps. But if they had been advanced for eugenic reason, that would have retarded or stopped the acceptance." - Frederick Osborne, a Population Control Founder.
I give this book a five star, even with Ms. Washington's back peddling. I absolutely recommend this fascinating book. I would encourage everyone to familiarize themselves with term "presumed consent." This means that doctors can confiscate your organs immediately after death without your consent before death or the consent of your family after death. This sophisticated grave robbing. Please visit my book blog for June with your review of the book and review thread "De Corpse Getting de Shaft.
There was a lot of pain and ugliness in this book. Those poor slave women being tortured and brutalized could have been me, had I been born during that time. My family could have prayed that I would die in the summer. So my body would discompose quickly so that it would me it worthless for the grave robbers.
I encourage all to read this book, but most especially, my people.
It's always useful to be reminded...Review Date: 2008-05-19


VERY STRONG BOOKReview Date: 2000-07-20
TRUE, BUT VERY RAWReview Date: 2000-07-18
Filled With Truth and PowerReview Date: 1999-10-25
THE REAL DEALReview Date: 1999-10-05
Short and Sweet ProseReview Date: 1999-09-15

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Undiscovered CountryReview Date: 2008-06-22
IndispensableReview Date: 2007-08-01
Amazingly Woven DetailReview Date: 2008-04-03
Excellent and InformativeReview Date: 2007-05-11
What is best about this read is it flows like a history book. I give much credit to Mr. Branch for simply telling the story and not adding too much of his own commentary and opinion. That is one of my pet peeves with many of our `writers' today. They want to impose their opinions and biased interpretations. We do not need opinions. We need to educate ourselves with facts and draw our own conclusions. Okay, I will get off the soapbox.
Anyway I highly recommend this book. It is a very long read, but if you seek a deeper understanding of the African American experience this is a great start. Many of the issues we face today can be interpreted more accurately by getting a more complete account of our past.
Moving storytellingReview Date: 2007-03-18

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Phenomenal Book Review Date: 2007-11-24
I am about to start reading this bookReview Date: 2005-01-06
ExcellentReview Date: 2007-10-16
Iyanla touches my soulReview Date: 2004-10-20
WonderfulReview Date: 2001-09-07
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I'm happyReview Date: 2008-03-22
Historical Fiction originalReview Date: 2006-02-26
This book gives a great emotional account of the horrors of slavery. It is amazing the vocabulary the author had without being formally educated.
This book will stay with me for a while.
A vivid account of slave lifeReview Date: 2005-12-15
By the middle of the story, the reader can easily assess that slave life is neither desirable nor easy. Crafts and her mistress are captured with only more hardships following. Crafts depicts for the reader her passing from one master to the next after her mistress's death. Things only continue to get worse until she brings the reader along with her on her flight to freedom.
Though met by a series of mishaps throughout the novel, Crafts finally obtains freedom to live life with her husband and her recently found mother. No doubt, the reader is happy to see something pleasant finally happen for Crafts. The reader is left with not only a sense of happiness for the author, but with a vibrant image of what it took to get there. The Bondswoman's Narrative is most certainly a good choice for anyone wanting a harsh, yet inspiring, account of what slave life was truly like.
An unpublished masterpiece?Review Date: 2004-10-10
There is also a photo depiction of the abduction of his slave, Jane Johnson with her family, off the Steamer Washington on July 18, 1855, in Philadelphia "by force" by a gang of Negroes led by an abolotionist. Since he was unable to locate and reclaim his servants, Jane was subsequently replaced by Hannah -- who escaped in the Spring of 1857. He must have been a hard taskmaster.
One interesting thing (for me) was a mention of John Brown's (of Harper's Ferry, West VA fame) hanging in Charleston, VA. It was observed that he died as he lived, "game." He certainly was no coward.
I found too much redundancy in the introduction by Henry L. Gates, Jr., and the narrative itself. Absorbed in finding and preserving black culture in written form, he spends a lot of effort propounding on his conclusions, instead of the facts. Like a local writer involved in uncovering ancient history, he uses too many "that's" proving he is not scholary. To me, it shows a definite lack of education and too much emphasis on self promotion, so that whatever is printed will be thought or taken as the truth, the whole truth and nothing else.
As with all autobiographical material it is hard to tell what is fact and where the fiction begins. An old acquaintance now deceased who had been in the Merchant Marines in his younger years and received much enjoyment in bewildering strangers with his detailed stories, told me how he manufactured "truth." Add a few relevant facts which can be substantiated and names of real people and presto! it's history -- not fiction.
As with science, the individual authors are expounding on their own theories, not facts per se. It's the same in any field and any "case" history. Mr. Gates wanted to prove this narrative was authentic; therefore, he spent more effort with his "proof" than the slave's account itself.
Something that old can never be proven beyond a doubt. Now Clifford Irving's bogus biography of Howard Hughes was ill-timed. Had he waited until after the person's demise, there would always be doubt and nothing to prove he was a liar.
I don't believe a slave would know some of the words used by this writer. By including family background and descriptions of events, it is taken as the authentic tale of a real Hannah Crafts. He did too much surmising "what if's" to have run down the actual writer to New Jersey -- to have been the runaway slave from North Carolina.
I found the marked out words and phrases to be distracting (also detracting). It would have helped to have the edited parts left out; the 21 chapters would have sufficed without so much explanation and additions (in brackets). Instead of making this clearer, it befuddles the story itself.
I'm not a user of the word "that" which is grossly overused in newspapers today. About ten years ago, I typed the lengthy "memoir" of my ex-husband, a college English professor, and edited at intervals throughout. Of course, he proof-read every page before having the entirety copied and bound to distribute to members of his family. Sometimes, he agreed to my "clarifications"; at others, he'd say, "but we didn't talk that way." Growing up in a tiny hamlet between Shelbyville and Chapel Hill (where he'd been born) in Middle TN, and being about fifteen years my senior, he'd experienced things and feelings totally opposite to what I had in Knox County (East TN). My reasons to "edit" were for the benefit of those who'd be reading his memories, not to change events -- and he finally agreed with me.
Perhaps I should have left things exactly the way he expressed them, no matter how grammatically incorrect they were, as now that is what I am wishing Mr. Gates had done with this manuscript. The things he marked through seemed inconsistent vocabulary for such a young, uneducated woman confined in "the peculiar institution", and I'd have preferred not to have to think about them.
The textual annotations did not add to the story and were a bit too detailed. You can analyze a situation "to death." Some things are better left to the reader's imagaination.
This story is as old as the hills. Didn't he see the similarities between characters of this narrative and those in SHOW BOAT? Sad but true. Life is not always easy for those without power or money.
You have to enjoy this style of writingReview Date: 2004-07-10

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The Edge of MidnightReview Date: 2008-05-27
loved it!Review Date: 2008-02-17
***Who's Afraid Of The Big Bad Wolf!!!***Review Date: 2008-02-06
I just love Beverly JenkinsReview Date: 2007-09-23
Wonderful... Wonderful... Wonderful!!!Review Date: 2007-07-06
This is the first in a series of contemporary novels written by Ms. Jenkins. It is part mystery and romance novel that will keep you on the edge of your seat. She has given each character unique flavor, sass and humor that guides the story. She also included history and connection to favorites from the historical novels. No one has mastered a love scene in quite that same way as Ms. Jenkins has.
This is the fourth time I have read this book and each time I find something new and exciting. !!! Thanks Ms. Bev.
Peace and Blessings!!

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EXCITINGReview Date: 2008-08-28
loooooove it Review Date: 2008-05-12
In Love with Madaris...Review Date: 2008-04-11
Eternally YoursReview Date: 2008-03-20
Eternally mine's. I love Clayton MadarisReview Date: 2008-03-07

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***I'm Getting There!!!***Review Date: 2007-11-17
Love the Cole Family!!!!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2007-10-30
Protective Possessive ProviderReview Date: 2007-10-10
Excellent!Review Date: 2007-07-09
Great bookReview Date: 2006-11-21

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I got the Sweetest TabooReview Date: 2008-10-05
Off The Meter!Review Date: 2008-09-22
i loved the sweetest taboo!!!!!Review Date: 2008-08-28
Can you say...HOTReview Date: 2008-08-16
I Won't Tell If You Won'tReview Date: 2008-08-10
Yuri has loved her longtime friend Britt for as long as she can remember. When an opportunity presents itself to act on that, will she let a little something like her husband get in the way?
From the outside looking in, Drae is living large with her husband Hassan, a big time producer. What Drae failed to tell everyone is that Hassan produces alright, but his movies are of a very adult nature and she "auditions" his talent. Fed up, will the next audition be the last?
"The Sweetest Taboo" aims for, and delivers, provocative thrills that satisfy across the board. Risque's humor complements this tale. She crafts characters who live and breathe. Readers will find themselves caring for the two women at the heart of "The Sweetest Taboo," and the supporting ones too. Who can't love Nae-Nae?
The temptation is great in this review to quote some of the dialogue and witty banter, but that would rob readers of the pleasure of sampling Risque's style. But I will say this...p*ssies be hating on Tee Tee!

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Great BookReview Date: 2008-07-10
K.B.
Truly Crowned JewelsReview Date: 2007-10-03
My only disappointment was that the picture are not in color. I would love to have been able to see those plumes and feathers in all their glory!
A Must Have...Review Date: 2007-06-12
Crowns: Portraits of Black Women in Church hatsReview Date: 2006-11-07
I love hats so much, I wear them every day of the week. During the week I usually wear cowboy hats or something sporty. However, on Sunday, it the dressy going to church hat. And if you are into hats, you will know what I mean about the, 'church hats'.
Being raised in the South, you were'nt completely dressed when going to church until you put on your hat and heels. To this day I do not go to church without a hat.
This book, Crowns, really takes me back. It's a wonderful book. It is on a table in my home and it makes for great conversation with visitors.
FANTASTIC BOOK!!!!!
Joyce Marshall-Hamblet
Ladies and Their HatsReview Date: 2006-08-01
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