Nada A. reviewed Between the World and Me: Notes on the First 150 Years in America on + 1388 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
In Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates writes a letter to his teenage son on"What is it like to inhabit a black body and find a way to live within it?" This book will assuredly garner strong opinions - both from those who agree and disagree with its ideas. Either way, it will leave you thinking. Therein lies its power. I read it in one day and am now rereading already.
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Reviewed based on a copy received through a publishers giveaway. Thank you Shelf Awareness.
This was on Kate's AP Lang summer reading list. It is written by a black man to his black son and talks about growing up black in America. It is not easy reading. Growing up in the poor neighborhoods of Baltimore as a black boy, having to learn to navigate the streets, and your primary concern being protection of your body to stay safe, stay alive. Going to Howard University and expanding your horizons, seeing people with black skin in many different ways. Moving to New York and expanding your horizons yet again. But at the base of it all is cops still killing black men and racism in America.
JOANNE (joann) - , reviewed Between the World and Me: Notes on the First 150 Years in America on + 412 more book reviews
This is very enlightening to me as a white person. I think, personally, that it is terrible that black people feel the way that he feels. It must be such a burden and heartache to be made to feel that you are not worth anything, no matter how you live.
I know that a lot of races have gone through this, but this author so places his race as the main race that will never overcome the stigma.
I know that a lot of races have gone through this, but this author so places his race as the main race that will never overcome the stigma.