The Fire Next Time (Twentieth Century Classics)

by James Baldwin
The Fire Next Time (Twentieth Century Classics)
book data
1175 ratings, 4.34 average rating, 105 reviews (more data...)
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published
January 25th 1990 (first published 1963) by Penguin Books Ltd

binding
Paperback, 96 pages

isbn
0140182756   (isbn13: 9780140182750)

description
It's shocking how little has changed between the races in this country since 1963, when James Baldwin published this coolly impassioned plea to "...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1491)



Silvia
01/28/08

bookshelves: classics, favorites, non-fiction
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: all Americans
By chance I found this book at a local thriftstore for ten cents and it has changed my life forever. It took so much of my strength to finish it, because the truth in it was so painful. I recommend all Americans to read this book, too. It is essential for our country's survival and for true peace among our people. This work is one of the most important documents on racism I have ever read. Enlightening.
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Adam
11/02/08

bookshelves: leftist-thought, memoir-autobio
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in October, 2008
recommends it for: anyone who thinks or acts or relates to other people
Another book that I re-read recently. This book consists of two pieces; Baldwin's letter to his nephew and an essay. Both pieces gave me great insight into race relations and white racism.

Baldwin recounts his childhood, growing up in Harlem, including reflections on his experiences in the church, his observations of poverty, and his run-ins with hustlers and the street-life. He combines this with a passionate and convincing psychological and sociological inquiry into racism.

In both pieces...more
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Lokee
09/26/08

Is it hyperbole to claim Baldwin as the greatest essayist? There's always, it seems, that possibility. A likelihood even--I am, most of my friends would claim, prone to excited exaggeration. And lets be honest, superlatives of any sort deserve suspicion. After all, those who like to make those unmovable and definite claims are the same people who haven't read much at all. So it goes without saying, though I am now saying it, that I am uneasy even as I type this sentence.

I have tried to be q...more
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Jeff
08/16/08

Read in August, 2008
I had read some of Baldwin's other books, but this was the first piece of non-fiction of his that I had encountered. I was unable to put it down. Baldwin begins the book as a letter to his nephew about the difficulties that face him as a young black man in America. This is the short intro to the book, the remainder being an open letter to both black and white America...an honest assessment of the racial divide in this country through the first 60 years of the 20th century.

What seems to se...more
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Robert
12/08/07

bookshelves: favorites
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for: everyone must read this
"Behind what we think of as the Russian menace (and today what we could call the Islamo-Fascist menace) lies what we do not wish to face, and what white Americans do not face when they regard a Negro: reality -the fact that life is tragic. Life is tragic simply because the earth turns and the sun inexorably rises and sets, and one day, for each of us, the sun will go down for the last, last time. Perhaps the whole root of our trouble, the human trouble, is that we will sacrifice all the bea...more
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Matthew
Read in January, 2007
A brutally honest and eloquent examination of the experiences and attitudes of blacks living in America during the middle of the 20th century. It is a fascinating read---brilliant and poetic, yet easily accessible. Baldwin not only describes the plight of the black American, he makes it tangible. And he does so in such a straightforward, logical manner, that his conclusions seem inarguable, undeniable.

At the very least, there are passages of The Fire Next Time that are as enlightening any...more
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Amelia
10/05/08

bookshelves: history, memoir--biography
Read in November, 2007
James Baldwin has a talent for writing of his ideas and ideals in a way that was extremely intelligent and accessible, as well as very powerful. The two letters that make up this small volume do an amazing job of portraying the political and (to a point) the religious culture at the time of the Civil Rights Movement. Examining many angles of the situation, from prevalent white views of African Americans to how these views affect people in the black community to the growing influence (and perha...more
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jo
12/17/07

bookshelves: books-i-teach
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: anyone who cares about america
it's hard to overstate the contemporary relevance of this book. apart from the issue of black separatism, which is certainly not as alive now as it was in the sixties, baldwin's description of the hollow soul of white (which i choose to read, also, as capitalistic) america could have been written (by a brilliant writer) last night. and his prediction of america's bleak fate seem to be coming to pass even as i write this brief review...

the beauty of cultural studies is that you can take each...more
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Kelly
05/25/08

Read in May, 2008
It didn’t blow me away possibly in part due to it being a little dated. His interactions with Elijah Muhammad and insight into this religion and its doctrine were really interesting. I also really liked the last couple of pages and like always found a few great quotes in it....
“People ought to love the Lord because they loved Him, and not because they were afraid of going to Hell.” (p. 35)
“There is absolutely no reason to believe that white people are better equipped to frame the...more
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Heather
bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in October, 2000
I read this book as part of an undergraduate course titled, "Domination, Resistance, and Justice" and is the class I refer to post-hence as my "Human Rights" course. This was one of the better books we read during the course and was complemented by an in-class viewing of a documentary on James Baldwin. Coupled together I completely fell in love with James Baldwin. Baldwin is uniquely able to articulate the forces that converge on humanity and conspire to pit us one against th...more
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Wariesi
Read in August, 2008
recommended to Wariesi by: Sha. B.
"Whether in private debate or in public, any attempt I made to explain how the Black Muslim movement came about, and how it has achieved such force was met with a blankness that revealed the little connection that the liberals' attitudes...or even their knowledge- revealed...that they could deal with the Negro as a symbol or a victim but had no sense of him as a man." (pg.58)

Some reviews will read that this book is dated. I say the principle's apply to today as much as ever. I ap...more
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Alires
Alires marked it as to-read (review of isbn 067974472X)
11/20/08

bookshelves: to-read
i saw this on Cornell West's "what every parent should read their child" selection (Newsweek, Nov 3, 2008). Knowing Cornell West, this will be a proactive choice for parents and children alike.
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Carissa
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: Anyone and everyone
That racism is all but too real. It was written before my time, sadly it's still going on today by my peers. To have older men and women in this world that are racist, I somewhat understand. It's a lifetime of behavior that would be very hard to break. When it's my generation that is racist, I feel nothing for them. They know better, look at the world we live in, we have so much being thrown at us that says "no that's not right" or "this is a more educated view of the situation&q...more
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Michael
recommends it for: anyone who thinks they understand America, or wants to
Worth revisiting in this so-called "Post-Race" America.
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Brenda
12/01/08

One of my all time favorite reads
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Beth
06/27/08

"What comes up must come down." Reading this life and perspective changing book about race in America at age eighteen made me cry. Barack Obama has echoed it in recent speeches, bringing it back into immediate relevance. The idea that not only America but the world is facing the same analogy, at the top of the most improbable waterwheel we've ever seen, with stakes even higher and a failure behind us, nearly 50 years after Baldwin wrote this book makes me tear up again. Read this to be...more
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Ginnie
08/07/08

bookshelves: essays, race, treasure
Mindy's posting brought this back to me in a rush.

"God gave Noah the rainbow sign said no more water, but fire next time"

I just went to verify that my dog-eared, annotated copy is still on the shelf where I replaced it last time I read it. I see that I had copied a quote from Langston Hughes onto a blank page,
"Baldwin uses words as if he uses waves, to flow and beat, advance and retreat, rise and take a bow and disappearing....a thought becomes poetry and the poetry il...more
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Vicki
03/22/08

recommends it for: anyone who has ever struggled with purpose, identiy, or this crazy world we live in
If you've never read James Baldwin, do yourself a favor and get this book. He is one of the best writers ever to grace the Earth with his presence. This is a good start to unlocking the genius that is,

"You were born into a society that spelled out with brutal clarity, and in as many ways as possible, that you were a worthless human being...Take no one's word for anything - including mine - but trust your experience. Know whence you came. if you know whence you came, there is really no ...more
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Dana
02/11/08

Read in February, 2008
As a historical read, very interesting. Applied to modern day, I would describe this as enlightening.

Baldwin discusses .humanity. in America, although he never uses the word, and he is extremely confident in his insights. It is not a discussion: "Perhaps we...," it is a lesson. I am amazed not only how much this text is still applicable with respect to treatment of minorities in America but also how straight-to-the-issue it is.

Many memorable quotes as well.
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Kandice
Read in May, 2008
recommended to Kandice by: Gramma.
recommends it for: Non-fiction readers, Non-racist readers. :)
Wow. James Baldwin is SUCH a powerful author, and I LOVE his use of language and style. It is so unique, and really adds emphasis to his writings. This is the second piece of Baldwin's that I have read, and I am in love. He expresses his anger and resentment toward the racism that he experienced, but in such a useful way, and not toward any one group of people, but to the system that all of us Americans inhabit. He is brilliant. The book is brilliant. READ IT!!
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The Fire Next Time (Paperback)
The Fire Next Time (Hrw Library)
The Fire Next Time (Hardcover)
The Fire Next Time (Hardcover)
The Fire Next Time (School & Library Binding)








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