Now that's what I'm talking about Food for the Mind!
P Street, came from nowhere with many, many, "African"American books. Thanks for the list.
I hope these books will actually be read. Please don't just make a list, read these books and use the information. Please read them. I wanted this site to be about African American MEN and MEN of Color. We need to come together and get it together for our women and children's survival.
There is a war going on and you (Young MEN) are the soldiers on the front line. The hunt is on and you (Young MEN, not women) are the prey. "They" don't want us here. A people is weak without their MEN. Know this and prepare youself for attack, it's war time, I hope you see this. God bless you and may he keep you smart and strong.
Edited by BIGGMike
Look to the skies and keep your eyes on the prize! I been through Hell but, STILL I RISE!
I didn't go to bed until 4am this morning because I was studying for a Mid Term Exam. And woke at 7am to get ready for work, full time. Now that's strong and goal oriented! Stay focused and strong MEN.
Look to the skies and keep your eyes on the prize! I been through Hell but, STILL I RISE!
realvicious
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I do not think this book was mentioned. Everyone check out the book Reallionaire by Farrah Gray. The young black millionaire. His book is recommended for young and the old and all races. I was reading it one day and white, hispanic and blacks was telling me that they are reading it by themselves and to their child
It is always about business
King of ATL BABY
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i read 11 of those books already. college is killing me right now. want to apologize for saying some of the books are wack. it's better to say i can tell who are the young cats are on this site and BiggMike isn't one of the young ones..lol. i was there before and you young will cats will see how your way of thinking naturally changes as you get older. just know these:
negro-walking dead, having lost land,history,culture,language & memory.
black-on your way to consciosness,seeking return to roots.
african/african______-recreating the consciousness which existed before the onset of slavery & colonization which resulted in the creation of the negro.
There is a war going on and you (Young MEN) are the soldiers on the front line. The hunt is on and you (Young MEN, not women) are the prey. "They" don't want us here. A people is weak without their MEN. Know this and prepare youself for attack, it's war time, I hope you see this. God bless you and may he keep you smart and strong.
Look to the skies and keep your eyes on the prize! I been through Hell but, STILL I RISE!
"He is a talented man. Here's some info on Young Black man that went through an awakening".
Haki Madhubuti
Haki R. Madhubuti, formerly known as Don Lee, a major poet, essayist, editor and publisher throughout the Black Arts Movement was born in 1942 in Little Rock, Arkansas. Madhubuti was raised in Detroit with his mother until the age of sixteen when she died from a drug overdose. Madhubuti claims that his mother, Maxine, is the prime force behind his creativity and interest in the Black Arts. After her death, Madhubuti finished high school and joined the Army and his experiences there cemented his interest and commitment in the Black Arts.
Madhubuti has published several collections of poetry, including Think Black, Black Pride, We Walk the Way of the World, Direction score: Selected and New Poems, Book of Life and Don't Cry, Scream. In addition to his poetry collections, Madhubuti also published a collection of critical essays entitled, Dynamite Voices: Black poets of the 1960s.
Madhubuti's work is particularly acute about charting the growth of Blackness within the individual conciousness. Madhubuti's work is especially characteristic of trying to chart a way out of whiteness that allows for strength and self-determination for Black Americans. His poetry is strongly affected by Gwendolyn Brooks and other writers of the time.
Madhubuti participated in the political aspects of the BAM by working as a "foot soldier" for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Community (SNCC), the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). In addition to working for political organizations, Madhubuti invested time in writing political essays, hoping to wake the eyes of the public to the events and attitudes of the world around them. His most notorious political collection of essays is entitled Enemies: The Clash of Races.
As a main part of the BAM, Madhubuti joined with Larry Neal to create a forum for book reviews for the work of African-American writers of the time. The Black Books Bulletin, was published quarterly for eight years and gave the public this information on the new and important works of the BAM authors.
Madhubuti contributed in almost every aspect of the political and cultural happenings of the BAM. He continues to write and is the Director of the Gwendolyn Brooks Center at Chicago State University where he resides with his wife Safisha.
Look to the skies and keep your eyes on the prize! I been through Hell but, STILL I RISE!
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