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Fear and Fury: The Reagan Eighties, the Bernie Goetz Shootings, and the Rebirth of White Rage Book Cover
20 copies
Print
In this masterful, groundbreaking work, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Heather Ann Thompson reveals how the infamous New York subway shooting of 1984 divided a nation, unveiling the potent cocktail of rage and resentment that ushered in a new era of white vigilante violence.

On December 22, 1984, white New Yorker Bernhard Goetz shot four Black teenagers at point-blank in a New York City subway car. Goetz slipped into the subway tunnels undetected, fleeing the city to evade capture. From the moment Goetz turned himself in, the narrative surrounding the shooting became a matter of extraordinary debate, igniting public outcry and capturing the attention of the nation.

While Goetz's guilt was never in question, media outlets sensationalized the event, redirecting public ire toward the victims themselves. In the end, it would take two grand juries and a civil suit to achieve justice on behalf of the four Black teenagers. For some, Goetz would go on to become a national hero, inciting a disturbing new chapter in American history. This brutal act revealed a white rage and resentment much deeper, larger, and more insidious than the actions of Bernie Goetz himself. Intensified by politicians and tabloid media, it would lead a stunning number of white Americans to celebrate vigilantism as a fully legitimate means for addressing racial fear, fracturing American race relations.

Drawing from never-before-seen and archival interviews, newspaper accounts, legal files, and more, Heather Ann Thompson sheds new light on the social and political conditions which set the stage for these events, delving into the lives of Goetz and his four victims—Darrell Cabey, Barry Allen, Troy Canty, and James Ramseur. Fear and Fury is the remarkable account and searing indictment of a crucial turning point in American history.
  • History
  • Crime
Take Men On Board!: The Dutch WW2 Escapes to England Book Cover
100 copies
Kindle
Dutch law school graduate Philip Winckel manages to escape Nazi-occupied Holland in February 1944. Germany still had the Country in its deadly grip, its long coastline included. Joined by a radio engineer plus three geology students, Philip miraculously slips through the enemy’s Atlantic Wall fortifications by sailing away in a small, repurposed fishing vessel. Powered by a Chevy truck engine, the five men crossed the perilous North Sea to reach England. Many had tried before but failed, resulting in their imprisonment and execution. The odds of their success were comparable to Russian Roulette albeit with just one empty chamber.Theirs was the only successful Dutch ocean crossing in 1944. They had much help. Over 100 individuals risked everything to assist them. In London, the five men put themselves in the service of HM Queen Wilhelmina by joining the Allied cause through the RAF, the Princess Irene Brigade and the Netherlands East Indies Army. For some the end goal was to free family members from the brutal Japanese prisoner camps. When the liberation of the East Indies was achieved, the Dutch colony erupted in total chaos, barreling towards its independence. Philip provides a chilling eyewitness account after taking part in a massive POW repatriation effort. It had, however, a very personal outcome.Meticulously researched, Borre’s engrossing story takes its readers from occupied Holland to a free England, and finally to Indonesia, the former Netherlands East Indies. Against all odds, after frequent mishaps and countless dangers, the book’s protagonists finally triumph. The Mighty 8th Air Force and the RAF Air Sea Rescue Service played significant roles in this outcome. This is a true tale of luck, adversity, and perseverance. The reader will be challenged by the thought, “What would I have done?” Uniquely, this rescue was filmed! Search for “RAF Rescue of Engelandvaarders.”
  • History
  • Non-fiction
Too Precious to Lose: A Memoir of Family, Community, and Possibility Book Cover
5 copies
Print
A moving and inspiring memoir from a former Obama White House staffer, about his rural Maryland family's untold history, the merger of three churches—two white, one Black—that changed the trajectory of their lives, and how a radical embrace of community became their salvation—and his.

Jason Green was raised on fellowship—literally. Fellowship Lane, the once unpaved road he grew up on served as a spiritual metaphor throughout his coming of age. A precocious preacher’s kid, the ministry called out to Green, but ultimately he devoted himself to serving the people in a different way—through public service. After working on John Kerry’s presidential campaign, he spent four and a half years working in the White House as special assistant to Barack Obama. 


However, Green’s governmental path was cut short by a devastating call that his ninety-five-year-old grandmother was on her deathbed. At her side, he listened intently while she told him her every memory dating back to her birth in Quince Orchard, a town that no longer exists. He was preoccupied with disbelief; how could he have never known the true legacy of his tiny community? How could a whole town’s existence be erased but for the memory of a few surviving elders? Green’s historical research uncovered a surprising trove of tales about the self-determined mission of his newly freed ancestors to build an African American house of worship; and how generations later, on the eve of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assasination, that church's progeny would be at the center of a brave and fortelling decision to create an integrated church. Quince Orchard’s lost story is part of what Green calls the texture in the American the moral leadership of the Black church, the longstanding resilience of the Black community and the transformative love of the Black family.

A heart-stirring blend of memoir, history, and social justice, Too Precious to Lose traces one family through a century of life in a single community and all that was gained and lost along the way. Fueled by a new understanding of where he comes from, Green takes readers on a deeply personal journey asking his own questions about belonging all the while finding answers from the compassionate, communal-led lives of his forbearers. Too Precious to Lose is a modern return to a small-town’s past; a reclamation of a collective sense of hope and humanity in a much divided world.
  • Memoir
  • History
When People Were Things: Harriet Beecher Stowe, Abraham Lincoln, and the Emancipation Proclamation Book Cover
20 copies
Kindle
During the three decades before the American Civil War, Southern slaveholders tried to end the anti-slavery movement. They exerted their influence by censoring the press and the mail, attacking and killing abolitionists, burning buildings, drafting frightening new laws and repealing others, and terrorizing and abducting Northern free Blacks. Northerners began to realize that the Slave Power would not rest until slavery was allowed to plant itself all over the nation; many stopped compromising and pushed back. This awakening was due to the efforts of visionaries who used the power of the pen, purse, pulpit, and press to expose the brutal injustices of slavery in an attempt to bring about the liberation of an enslaved people and restore the country to its original commitment of equality for all.
When People Were Things offers a humanizing lens of these disturbing times, portraying well-known Americans in new and surprising ways—activists that still inspire and energize us today—while not shying away from revealing a world often disturbed by Blackness. The book puts the lie to the argument that tries to portray America’s slave-owning past in any positive light whatsoever.
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  • History
  • Biography
The People Can Fly: American Promise, Black Prodigies, and the Greatest Miracle of All Time Book Cover
20 copies
Print
Whiting award-winning poet and Distinguished Chair of Humanities at MIT, Dr. Joshua Bennett creates a masterful synthesis of personal narrative and history that illuminates the promises and perils of being labelled a Black prodigy.

The outside world’s perception of Black promise comes and goes. It does so in ways that are undeniably advantageous for Black children. Yet here, Dr. Bennett explores the rarely examined pitfalls of being a Black prodigy in a society that has, too often, defined Blackness as the very absence of intellect. Bennett probes what it means to be othered, even if this othering is the same key to an individual’s success in an unfair world, demanding that we build alternative futures that make space for the promise and hope of every child.

In The People Can Fly Bennet shares his own academic journey—including spoken word performances at The White House and Sundance Film Festival, an NAACP Image Award, and a Guggenheim Foundation fellowship—mirrors the ebb and flow between being deemed promising and “a problem.” He bolsters this personal narrative by observing how disability within his own family complicates societies perception of genius, and by diving into the under-examined history of young intellectuals like Oscar Moore, Thomas Wiggins, Stephen Wiltshire, and others. Together, Bennett lays out an arresting portrait of a world that obscures genius behind a disorienting facade of otherness and exceptionality.

With arresting prose and grace, The People Can Fly is an eye-opening reflection on what it means to be labelled gifted in today’s world; and a personal history and love letter to all the Black prodigies who have disturbed the veil of racism, and the children who will continue to do so.
  • Non-fiction
  • History
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