Monday, June 25, 2012

What I have been reading lately #52

The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man-- James Weldon Johnson

I was assigned this in college but never actually read it. It was different from what I expected (and, I'm pretty sure, not all that autobiographical). James Weldon Johnson is perhaps better known as the author of the lyrics to "Lift Every Voice and Sing" (aka "The Negro National Anthem", aka "The Black National Anthem").

The Neighborhood of Baseball-- Barry Gifford

This book is a memoir of one man's relationship with the Chicago Cubs. I've read it several times and have always enjoyed it.

Another Day of Life-- Ryszard Kapuscinski
A Polish journalist's account of the last days of Portuguese colonial rule in Angola. Another book that I've read several times and enjoyed.

There's a Boy in the Girl's Bathroom-- Louis Sachar

My daughter Alexandra recommended that I read this to my fourth grade class. They enjoyed it very much.

Time for Outrage (Indignez-vous!)-- Stephane Hessel
This book was written recently by a former French resistance fighter about the need to return to the old-fashioned values of liberty, equality, struggle against oppression, etc. A good book, and it only took a few minutes to read.

Change-- Mo Yan

Mo Yan is an author I have enjoyed reading in the past, and I enjoyed this book as well. It is a short memoir of his life growing up during the Cultural Revolution and in the People's Liberation Army.

Moving Through Here-- Don McNeill
This is a collection of article from the Village Voice about the hippies, Yippies, and other assorted folks in New York City and California during the 1960s. McNeill died at a young age in a drowning accident.

Fugitive Days: A Memoir-- Bill Ayers

This is an account of Bill Ayers journey from being an student anti-war activist to helping to found the Weather Underground and spending the better part of the 1970s as a fugitive from the FBI. It was very interesting.

Out of the Whale-- Jonah Raskin















Jonah Raskin wrote this book in the mid-1970s about his life. His parents were members of the Communist Party USA; he became a college professor and then a left-wing radical and Yippie. I enjoyed reading this book.

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"Hockey ought to be sternly forbidden, as it is not only annoying but dangerous." Halifax Morning Sun, quoted in Michael McKinley's Hockey - A People's History