Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 320.54092 EAN: 9780791040805 ISBN: 0791040801 Label: Chelsea House Publications Manufacturer: Chelsea House Publications Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 75 Publication Date: 1996-06 Publisher: Chelsea House Publications Studio: Chelsea House Publications
If there was any one man who articulated the anger, the struggle, and the beliefs of African Americans in the 1960s, that man was Malxolm X. His AUTOBIOGRAPHY is now an established classic of modern America, a book that expresses like none other the crucial truth about our times. "Extraordinary. A brilliant, painful, important book." TEH NEW YORKTIMES
Spotlight customer reviews:
Customer Rating: Summary: The Autobiography of Malcolm X is Excellent Comment: This is an excellent book and truly goes into the depth and breadth of who Malcolm X really was/is. The more you read it, the more you understand the greatness and wisdom of this self educated man who traveled the world and sat with kings and queens and royalty and was able to dialog and debate with the best of them. He was truly a blessing to his generation and future generations. I became a totally different person after reading this book. He answered so many questions that I had and made it so clear. I became totally inspired and increased my love of reading and increasing my knowledge base. I have great love and respect for him. He will always be revered as one who truly loved his people, worked tirelessly to wake them up and cared about the fate of mankind. Malcolm was an amazing man and he will always be missed! Customer Rating: Summary: Should be Required Reading! Comment: This is a truly outstanding book. You don't have to like or agree with Malcolm X to learn from it. Martin Luther King Jr. was undoubtedly the more effective civil rights leader, and King's thought in many ways is more profound. But without Malcolm X, the true depth and meaning of the black American experience cannot be fully grasped, with all the brutality of racism - the injustice delivered in a land where democracy is promised. Malcolm X did tell it like it is - he lived and told the story of the black man's justifiable rage and disappointment. This book tells of Malcolm's own life of disillusionment - first with the life of crime, then with the Nation of Islam and Elijah Muhammad, until finally at the end of his life the deeper meaning of his Muslim religion and of racial justice began to dawn upon him. Tragically he was gunned down before he could remake the image of a militant black man, which twelve years of service in the Nation of Islam had given him. Malcolm X was an extraordinary man, and has truly a remarkable tale to be told. To remove the scars of racism, the reading and understanding of this book should be an essential journey towards bettering race relations, and alleviating racial misunderstanding. Obviously Malcolm was not right about everything, and confesses his own wrongs. But he also points quite vividly to the wrongs he faced as an African-American. Customer Rating: Summary: A revelation. Comment: Along with 'Souls of Black Folk'-W.E.B. DuBois, 'Invisible Man'-Ralph Ellison, and 'Visions for Black Men'-Naim Akbar...this book is required reading for all African men in America, as well as any other persons serious about getting past the 'race' question that continues to plague us as a nation. Customer Rating: Summary: anglo-saxon reader Comment: first off i want to thank malcolm x for his thoughts on race after visiting mecca.he saw that persons of all races got together to worship and were colorblind.i will see this man in heaven he saw past racism in america to be a great christian!also i would like to give a big F to public schools in america for not teaching everything about slavery and who was involved,for example it wasn't until i went to college to major in history that i learned the truth about slavery.the white man didn't just go to africa with a big gun and round up black people as slaves,they established trade with the local tribes who traded goods with tribal leaders who had their own slaves as spoils of war and traded them with the white man as just another trade good so the tribes that traded were africans tradeing off other africans to the white's.try to find this in high school history or elementary school history,not likely.it is true that some white slave owners treated slaves horribly and i'm sure african tribes even treated some of their slaves horribly also.wrong is wrong no matter what your skin looks like!slavery is wrong!racism is wrong!!!!! ! ! "everyone" should be able to live free and should be able to worship freely and have pride in their people without being called racist! i'm guilty of being white, i love my race,does this make me a racist! no i don't think so. LOVE,RED Customer Rating: Summary: Important book of self discovery, resemption, and vindication Comment: I read this book along time ago and still retain alot of what I learned from it. There is no beating around the bush in this from the beginning he tells of his life as it happened. He tells of an early career in crime to his time in prison and he does not attempt to sugarcoat anything. He does explain his reasoning for having done what he had done in his youth, but he does not claim to be innocent.
He did manage to find a better way to fight his enemies during his incarceration, and anyone who has ever seen any footage of Malcolm X will understand what I mean. The man was a very acticulate and confrontational speaker. He was the spark that ignited the engine of the civil rights movement in many respects. The civil rights movement began as far back as pre-civil war and was slow to develop with minor progress for each generation. Malcolm was the man brave enough to say enough and to make his voice heard over the many voices of the nation that tried to rise over him.
Here is a man that took it upon himself to correct a society that had become accepting of the crimes of their ancestors and simply ignored them. It is only a stonesthrow back in time if you think about it and yet it is painful to imagine people could be so cruel.
I recommend this to anyone who hasn't read it as it is an excellent book and is a document of the life of a man who managed to play a pivotal role in changing the way America viewed itself.