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Honest, Positive, UpliftingReview Date: 2002-08-17
Provides insight and guidanceReview Date: 2001-02-09

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Firmin & The Racial Equality Thesis: A Timely Second ComingReview Date: 2005-03-14
This recovery is significant for a number of reasons. First and foremost, Firmin's work dislodges a fundamental keystone of Western civilization, namely the racial inequality thesis as articulated by such figures as Arthur de Gobineau. We must ask ourselves, why was de Gobineau canonized and Firmin buried? More importantly, what would society look like today if Firmin had been canonized and de Gobineau buried? The republication of Firmin's book gives us a second chance to consider these questions. (For social scientists, Robert V. Guthrie's classic book Even the Rat Was White: A Historical View of Psychology, would be an excellent companion read.)
Second, Firmin's work provides further and much needed new evidence that notions of Black intellectual "progress" from slavery to emancipation to integration or from colonization to independence to globalization are premised upon the fundamentally faulty notion that there was ever anything wrong with the Black mind to begin with that needed "progress" to improve it. Firmin's well researched, comprehensively argued, and densely annotated text was written during a period when educational opportunities were being systematically denied to most people of African descent in the New World in an effort to keep them from participating in society and sharing power or wealth with Whites. It is no accident that Firmin was a third-generation product of Haitian schools up to the university level (none of his formal education was received outside Haiti) - schools which had been designed post-independence to prove to a disbelieving world that Blacks were capable of civilization. To wit, Firmin could read French, English, German, classical Greek and Latin, as well as Egyptian hieroglyphics and his native Creole, making him able to go head-to-head with any European intellectual, albeit with African sensibilities. How many White or Black scholars of the time (much less today) could claim the same? Firmin's multilingual facility enabled him to marshal evidence for the equality of the human races and, in particular, for the equality of the Black race, from a multitude of sources both contemporary and ancient, giving his arguments a formidable quality that few could (or did) match.
One notable quality of this book is Firmin's humor. Indeed, one senses that Firmin was so confident of his assertions and arguments that he was secretly snickering beneath his breath at having to debunk such balderdash passing for science. At the same time, one discerns that behind this humor was the rage that had by then already become the common birthright of New World Africans living with the seeming intractability of racism. Firmin's acerbic wit adds levity and interest to a text that might otherwise read more dryly to the typically impatient 21st century reader.
A third reason this book is significant is that it crosses the French-English language barrier. U.S. born speakers of English typically do not speak or read other languages and thus deprive themselves of important intellectual substance. This is particularly true when it comes to material associated with the scholarly traditions of people of African descent. By reading Firmin's book, readers are forced to recall that we cannot know all there is to know about the Black experience, particularly in the New World, by reading materials originating in English or limiting ourselves to the study of African Americans.
Indeed, a fourth reason for the significance of the translation and republication of Firmin's book is that reading it compels us to consider 200 years of Haitian history, from the time of its independence in 1804 to the present, particularly in terms of how Haitian fortunes have been shaped by racism and resentment of Black self-determination and achievement. Such a read presses us to think critically about Haiti's current difficulties, particularly how it could go from a state that produced Firmin and other similarly brilliant African scholars, to its current status as one of the U.N.'s LDCs (least developed countries), plagued by external and internal instability, life-robbing poverty, and the unrelieved ravages of natural disasters.
Finally, this book is significant because it demonstrates that an African-centered intellectual perspective is neither inconsistent with nor exclusive of a globally focused perspective that respects and values all human groups. Firmin's thesis about the equality of the human races is founded on a basic and non-hagiographic assumption, well documented, of Black greatness, past and present - yet Firmin, not unlike other African Scholars such as Cheikh Anta Diop, clearly affirms that all human groups exhibit the full range from savagery and barbarism to high civilization and refinement, not only as a group at various points in history, but also within the group at any given point in time. All "races" manifest traits glorious or vile at some point in time. Firmin rejected the biological basis of race, instead asserting that "racial" differences among humans are attributable to differences in social evolution, education, and the hospitality of climate (i.e., physical living conditions). Taking this perspective one step further, he endorsed metíssage, a/k/a mestizaje, creolization, hybridity, etc., all while unequivocally affirming the value and necessity of Africanity on the world stage.
White French theorist Michel Foucault wrote in The Order of Things that "Western man" and Western civilization, characterized by a social order fueled by the relations of domination and their supporting ideologies, are self-deconstituting under the weight of their own inherent limitations. "Scientific" racism has been one of the main girders of this faulty order. That Firmin and his compelling text have been exhumed after a first failed attempt to undermine scientific racism at its very foundations seems no accident. Having had an additional century to experience the pernicious effects of this doctrine, we are perhaps now, more than ever before, ready to receive his message and give it the hearing it deserves.
From the Margin to the Center: Anténor Firmin's ResurrectionReview Date: 2005-03-14
This is a book that must be read and digested fully to comprehend the impact such a work will have on the mind of the reader. Approached openly and with regard for the social and historical context within which it was written, "The Equality of the Human Races" provides the basis for vigorous discussion among academics and non-academics alike. With that in mind, this review will briefly examine three areas believed to be of considerable significance to this reviewer: (1) Firmin's analysis of the social construct of race; (2) the ethnic/phenotypical characteristics of the inhabitants of "ancient Egypt," and (3) the role of African people in the development of civilizations across time and space (contrary to popular perceptions, the progeny of Africa have produced many great civilizations and equally notable systems of thought).
With respect to the construct of race, Firmin does an admirable job of outlining and supplanting dominant thoughts on the issue of the inferiority of African people. In several chapters with titles such as, "Monogenism and Polygenism," "Criteria for Classifying the Human Races," "Artificial Ranking of the Human Races," and "Comparison of the Human Races Based on Their Physical Constitution," Firmin uproots commonly held "truths" of the 19th Century and demonstrates their untenability. Firmin's work is so replete with supporting evidence for his claims that I will leave it to the reader to discover for themselves the weight of his arguments against de Gobineau's thesis. In so doing, he replaces such notions with arguments that seem today to be taken-for-granted assumptions.
In examining the region of Ancient Kemet (currently referred to as "Ancient Egypt" - another discussion for another time), Firmin presents incontrovertible historical evidence supporting his and earlier writers' accounts that the inhabitants of the region were black, a term that over time has acquired greater social significance than in the past. In providing copious research on the region, particularly the journal entries of early visitors, Herodotus among them, Firmin soundly situates the origins of the peoples of the region in Upper Kemet/Egypt, i.e. in the interior or black Africa. Interestingly, his argument regarding the African/Black phenotype of the ancient Kemites/Egyptians predates assertions made by Afrocentric scholars by nearly a century. Such a position by a scholar from the 19th century, from Haiti no less, allows for the removal of defaming designations applied to today's Afrocentric scholars who are often viewed as scholarly extremists and historical revisionists.
In Chapter 17, "The Role of the Black Race in the History of Civilization," Firmin documents many facts that have withstood the great procession of time and today remain intact as they relate to the significant contributions of African people to the development of math, science, architecture, literature, language, and philosophy. Given the existence of the Pyramids at the Giza Plateau, Olmec Heads in Central America, and the documents recently unearthed at the Timbuktu University in Mali, not to mention the work of independent scholars like Runoko Rashidi, Firmin's work allows readers to observe for themselves the social and historical contributions of African people the world over. This being the case, this reviewer asks that the reader peruse the multiple examples - supplied by Firmin and other great thinkers both then and now - that serve to dislodge notions of African absence within the building of historic civilizations.
As with writings from Selena Sloan Butler, Edward Wilmot Blyden, Martin R. Delany, all from the 19th and early 20th centuries, and more contemporarily, those of Drs. Cheikh Anta Diop, Yosef Ben-Jochannan, and John Henrik Clarke, the resurrection of Joseph Anténor Firmin and his work "The Equality of the Human Races" is yet another horn in the clarion call for continued research, reclamation, preservation, and presentation of works by African scholars and thinkers alike. As global society makes its trek toward the next phase of human beingness, works such as "The Equality of the Human Races" serve as a striking hammer against the lynch-pin that holds together pernicious notions regarding African people both on the continent and in the Diaspora.

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Review by Allen P. Bristow, author of THE PINKERTON EYEReview Date: 2001-11-23
The story is enhanced by many historically and technically accurate references to travel and the customs of the period. Lithographs and other illustrations add flavor that stimulates the reader's imagination. While the tale is of a fictional Pinkerton operative, the investigational techniques accurately represent those in vogue during the era...just as in THE PINKERTON EYE. Readers will enjoy the adventures of this pair of detectives and may associate Sadie with Doyle's Doctor Watson. It was an altogether good read.
Vivid historical seriesReview Date: 2000-09-03
Those who want to see what is possible to accomplish with a historical mystery need look no further than Richard Moquist's debut novel involving Sadie Greenstreet, the discontented wife of a Pinkerton agent who gets a chance to investigate a steamboat slaying on the post-Civil War Mississippi River.
Although happily married and with a career of her own as a Chicago journalist, Sadie knows something is missing. So when her husband is again to be sent away on a mission, she puts her foot down, determined to go along with him. Sent to ensure the safety of a river boat owner being pressured to sell out, she gets an opportunity to see a way of travel slowly being eclipsed by the railroads, and when the owner is found dead, at his writing desk, she gets to try her hand at detecting the not-so-gentle art of murder.
Moquist tells their story briskly and economically, using the vivid vernacular and descriptions from those times in a way that Dianne Day and Elizabeth Peters does not. A generous selection of photographs and illustrations, cleverly mingled among the text, are included. By the end of this tale, Sadie discovers what was missing, and with a telegraph from Alan Pinkerton in hand asking them to investigate a troubled baseball team in Cincinnati, the foundations are laid for an engaging and much-anticipated series.

A replyReview Date: 2000-01-02
"Dominion" leaves major questions with the reader.Review Date: 1999-08-06

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Fond MemoriesReview Date: 2005-09-17
This is what storytelling is all aboutReview Date: 1998-11-01


pageturnerReview Date: 2008-09-05
Max Perkins
a must-read!Review Date: 2008-09-05
How on earth has Drew Peterson not been arrested?Review Date: 2008-09-05
Worth the readReview Date: 2008-09-05
Great read for those looking for inside information or facts about the case.
A Must Read-Great Book!Review Date: 2008-09-03
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Encyclopedia of Bad Film Studio Business PracticesReview Date: 2001-02-19
A must-readReview Date: 2006-02-26
The author, a practising entertainment lawyer) covers typical/standard/boilerplate film industry deal contracts as issued by the big studios/distributors, and explains practically every line/item in them, and the definitions of the many contract terms.
BTW, ALL the terms of these contracts are rigged to screw independent producers out of net profit participaiton profits.
Then the author offers 'counter' negotiating points and the reasoning/arguments behind them.
He does state that success in using these counterproposals/arguments is limited due to the 'balance of power' between big studios and independent producers is tilted heavily in favour of the big studios.
The appendices are four distribution deal contracts. They're well worth the read, too, if only to familiarise oneself with them.
It is NOT a book to read quickly, but one to be read thoughtfully, to absorb and to learn the legal and business concepts in the contracts. The structure of each chapter makes this easy to do.

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Accepting DiversityReview Date: 2003-06-09
A moving portrait of the lives of more than forty adultsReview Date: 2002-10-06

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Rich and elegant history of American feministsReview Date: 2006-09-27
The three year creative process began with identifying and locating feminists who were active 1963 ~ 1975. They (or their heirs) were sent questionnaires and their responses were transformed into short bios. You can be certain of the veracity of the information here but don't think for a moment that it is dry or exclusively academic. With each biography you will fall in love with a feminist who was a first; first lawmaker, first professor, first publisher, first judge, first member in a legislature, first to march, first to open women's health clinic. In this reading you will read and feel how these brief years paved every road for women in America and, thus, women in the world. It is rich as cheesecake, a bite everyday is delectable.
Barbara Love is a national treasure ..Review Date: 2006-12-18
Thank you, Barbara Love!
Chase
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Field GiudesReview Date: 2002-11-05
Field Guide to Freshwater Mussels of the MidwestReview Date: 2000-07-19
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