Rating:
4 Stars
Themes:
Classics, Fiction, Short Stories
Thoughts:
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily. It’s interesting to read short stories that reflect the 1960s experiences of African Americans, written by someone with the same lived experience. It’s unfortunately just as relevant today as when it was published. There are only 8 stories but it covers many complex topics such as housing discrimination, addiction, and family secrets as well as the overt racism and institutional racism.
Favourite Quote:
“Goddamit to hell, I'm sick of it. Can't I get a place to sleep without dragging it through the courts? I'm goddamn tired of battling every Tom, Dick, and Harry for what everybody else takes for granted. I'm tired, man, tired! Have you ever been sick to death of something? Well, I'm sick to death. And I'm scared I've been fighting so goddamn long I'm not a person any more I'm not Booker T. Washington. I've got no vision of emancipating anybody I want to emancipate myself. If this goes on much longer, they'll send me to Bellevue, I'll blow my top, I'll break somebody's head. I'm not worried about that miserable little room. I'm worried about what's happening to me, to me, inside. I don't walk the streets, I crawl. I've never been like this before. Now when I go to a strange place I wonder what will happen, will I be accepted, if ľm accepted, can I accept?”

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