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The Joys of Fatherhood -
Preparing for Father's Day by Kevin
Wayne Johnson
http://reviews.aalbc.com/the_joys_of_fatherhood.htm
"A wise son maketh a
glad father: but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother."
(Proverbs 10:1)
What a joy to hear the words "'Daddy!'" each day when I arrive home from
work. What a blessed privilege to know that my Heavenly Father entrusts me
to raise three healthy sons in the midst of this dying world! What an honor
to be a "'role model'" to young sons that will soon transition into young
men. It is my behavior, lifestyle, mannerisms, and habits that they will
emulate. It is my responsibility to train them in this present time in
order that they clearly understand their God-ordained roles as husbands and
fathers in the very near future. What a joy, what a responsibility, what an
honor!! |
Open Letters to
Oprah Winfrey - After Imus: Now What?
http://reviews.aalbc.com/open_letters_to_Oprah_Winfreys.htmOn
April 4, 2007, radio talk show host Don Imus went on the air and called the
Rutgers University women's basketball players "nappy-headed hos." After Imus…now
what? Where do we go from here? Is there a double standard in this country?
A conversation we all need to have right now. |
Outstanding
Literary Work - Debut Author at the NAACP Image Award Nominee
Dwight Fryer - A
Class Act with a Great Book
http://authors.aalbc.com/dwight_naacp_award.htmThe award for
Outstanding Literary Work - Debut Author at the NAACP Image Awards eluded
me; however, the week end experience was nothing short of wonderful for my
wife and me. Actor Hill Harper won for his delightful book, Letters To A
Young Brother. The book has received strong reviews and would be a great
gift to any person, not just the youthful males in your life. |
38th NAACP Image Awards
by Kam Williams
http://reviews.aalbc.com/38th_naacp_image_awards.htmImage
Awards Upstaged by Resignation of NAACP President
Judging by the 38th Annual NAACP Image Awards which aired on Fox last
Friday, it appeared that the organization was really getting its act
together. First of all, the show was broadcast live for the first time, as
opposed to pre-recorded, which had always been the case in the past. |
Marie Brown TriHarLenium
Presentation - Harlem Literary Scene 1986 to 1996
http://reviews.aalbc.com/harlem_literary_scene.htm
Read Marie Brown's presentation given at the TriHarLenium
Panel Discussion on Monday December 11, 2006
TriHarLeninum 1976 -2006 chronicles the evolution of
the Harlem community during these decades. The project includes four
symposium/performances capturing the stories of a diverse panel of artists,
scholars, historians, community activists, clergy, and others, as well as
five performances of Craig S. Harris' composition in cultural institutions
and public parks throughout Harlem. |
Sonia
Sanchez and Ten Grandmothers Acquitted of ‘Defiant Trespassing’ by Jamie
Walker
http://reviews.aalbc.com/sonia_sanchez_acquited.htm
Philadelphia, PA—Sonia
Sanchez, 71, and ten other grandmothers, who are part of an organization
called The Granny Peace Brigade (GBP), were recently acquitted in a
Philadelphia Community Courtroom on charges of 'defiant trespassing' in
front of an Army Recruitment Center earlier this year. |
Nigguh
Please! by Marvin X
http://authors.aalbc.com/nigguh_please.htmThe black culture police are at
it again, lead running dog is Rev. Jesse Jackson, perhaps the most hypocritical
culture policeman on the scene--especially after leading president Clinton in
prayer over Monica while himself engaged in extramarital shenanigans. I can't
take Jesse Jackson with his twisted mouth ( from lying) pontificating on moral
issues while he is the most immoral of men, even pimping the blood of MLK, Jr. |
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Maxine
Waters The Hip Hop Symposium Interview with Kam Williams
http://hiphopbookclub.com/maxine_waters.htm
I’m hoping
to get the hip-hop community more involved with public
policy makers, so that they could begin to influence the
thinking of older and mainstream people. They can contribute
tremendously in terms of dealing with the setting of public
policy that really determines where this country is headed
and how it’s going to get there. For instance, the FCC is
having meetings all around the country. They were in L.A.,
and I was there taking them on about consolidation in the
media, with the L.A. Times which is owned by the Tribune
Company, along with WGN in Chicago, and 27 other TV
stations, etcetera, etcetera. Now, wouldn’t it have been
wonderful if the hip-hop community had been there with me
and others who were prepared to take on the FCC?
Read
the Entire Interview |
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BET
First Annual Hip-Hop Awards by Kam Williams
http://hiphopbookclub.com/bet_awards.htm
If there was ever any doubt that gangsta’ rap is a man’s game, Black
Entertainment Television confirmed the fact that sisters need not apply at
its First Annual Hip-Hop Awards. The event was staged in Atlanta, where it
was hosted by pimp comedian Katt Williams, a protégé of Snoop Dogg known for
his misogynistic brand of humor. Katt set the tone in monologue with remarks
like the line where he referred to Venus and Serena Williams as natural
disasters. And Ludacris added an exclamation point by being bleeped within
seconds of kicking off the festivities with an expletive-laced rendition of
one of his hits. |
Poetry
Unleashed - Cave Canem’s 10th Anniversary
by Rondall
Brasher
http://aalbc.com/reviews/cave_canem.htmCave Canem was instituted in 1996
by fellow teachers/poets Toi Derricotte and Cornelius Eady. As long time
writers, they were acutely aware of the isolation and lack of cultural
support structures for Black poets in formal or informal education programs.
They sought to create a space for Black poets to learn, debate, grow, and
challenge themselves in order to challenge their craft. What began as an
annual summer retreat has evolved into a non-profit organization with a
full-time staff. |
Journaling:
A First Step to Publication
An Article by Desiree Day
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/journaling.htm
Once people find out I am a writer, invariably
their first question is, "How did you become a writer?"
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Daryle
Jenkins - The Klanbuster Interview with Kam Williams
http://aalbc.com/reviews/daryle_jenkins.htm
Everybody admires the
bravery firemen exhibit by rushing into a burning building when the human
survival instinct calls for exactly the opposite behavior. It is for similar
reasons that you are likely to find Daryle Lamont Jenkins so fascinating,
since this 37 year-old black man born in Newark devotes most of his
free-time to monitoring the movements of the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and
other white supremacists. |
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Remembering Glenn
Thompson
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/remembering_glenn_thompson.htm
Glenn Thompson was an
exemplary Black publisher. He viewed books as weapons of liberation and saw
his task as that of a soldier, arming the people to free themselves. He
chose to publish great books about people of African descent that helped to
define the reality of the Black experience. He also chose to publish
outstanding books that redefined the White experience from the perspectives
of those who were oppressed and dispossessed by it--and he did so in subtle,
subversive, but often comical ways. |
BOB
MARLEY IS STILL CATCHING FIRE
by
Christopher John Farley
http://aalbc.com/reviews/bob_marley_is_still_catching_fire.htm
May 11th is the 25th anniversary of the passing of the
king of reggae. Officially, he succumbed to cancer in Miami in 1981 at the
age of 36. Today, however, his music is more widespread, more popular, and
more respected than it ever was.
It is part of Rastafari teaching that there is no
dying, only living, and Marley held that to be true. For Marley, at
least, death was just the beginning... |
Broadway’s
‘The Color Purple’ Empowers Many by
Jamie Walker
http://aalbc.com/reviews/the_color_purple_on_broadway.htmNew
York—Ever since its debut on Broadway, Alice Walker’s compelling
narrative-turned-musical, “The Color Purple,” has brought out a host of
well-wishers, supporters, critics, and fans.
Walker’s acclaimed, best-selling novel received the Pulitzer Prize and an
American Book Award for fiction in 1983. In 1985, Stephen Spielberg (along
with Warner Bros. Pictures) turned the book into “an internationally popular
film.” |
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Marketing
Your Book - Eight Unique Ways to Promote Your Book
by Desiree Day Author of
Crazy Love
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/promote_your_book.htm
Whether you have just completed your first, third or
fifth book you want to see it succeed. Book promotion is a daunting task
that can leave even a seasoned publicist floundering for ideas. There are
thousands of books jockeying for the readers’ attention and you want your
book to be their first choice. Promoting a book is like being a cross
between Houdini and a detective. You have got to sleuth for creative
promoting avenues then magically tie them to your book to maximize
revenue-generating publicity. |
The “Queen of Real”
Signs 2nd Book Deal An Interview With Electa Rome Parks: Part II
By Lynnette Khalfani
http://reviews.aalbc.com/the_queen_of_real.htm Parks, a formerly
self-published writer, has just inked a second book deal with New American
Library, a division of Penguin, to publish her fourth novel, called Ladies
Night Out. Due to hit bookshelves in hardcover in 2006, Ladies Night Out
is “99% complete,” according to Parks. The story focuses on four high-profile,
single, African-American women who are best friends. “They have a monthly ladies
night out where they leave their stress behind. So it’s a really fun, sexy
novel,” Parks reveals. In other words, something that’s quite different than
what readers may have come to expect of Parks based on her debut novel, The
Ties That Bind or its sequel, Loose Ends. |
So, You
Wanna Write a Best Seller . . .
by Gwendolyn E. Osborne
http://reviews.aalbc.com/so_you_wanna_write_a_best_seller.htmWhat do
best-selling authors. Iyanla Vanzant, E. Lynn Harris, Parry Brown, Evelyn
Palfrey, Zane and Vickie Stringer have in common? They are among the growing
number of authors who self-published their first books and sold hundreds of
copies -- before major publishers embraced their work.
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Marvin X
Unplugged
An Interview by Lee Hubbard
http://reviews.aalbc.com/marvinxunplugged.htm
While drugs and their impact have been talked about, no one has really dealt
with the addiction to drugs and how it impacts a community and one's soul.
No one has, until Marvin X, a poet, long time writer and activist, decided
to touch this subject in his play, "A Day in the Life". The play
details Marvin's life ordeal with drugs, as well as the impact drugs had on
former Black Panthers Eldridge Cleaver and Huey Newton and the Black
community. |
How
Matriarchs Have Made Us -
A Film Review of Lackawanna Blues
by Brian Egeston
http://reviews.aalbc.com/lackawanna.htmOn
February 12th 2005, many television viewers had the opportunity to witness
another amazing celebration of the Black women, and a celebration of the
extended Black family, during the television debut of Lackawanna Blues
presented by HBO Films. |
Remembering
Ossie Davis, With Love
by Jamie Walker
http://reviews.aalbc.com/remembering_ossie_davis.htm
Harlem, New York—Thousands of mourners packed The
Riverside Church in Harlem on Saturday, February 12, 2005 to pay final
respects to Ossie Davis—acclaimed actor, writer, producer, director,
cultural griot, tireless civil rights activist, righteous warrior, and
divine human being—who died of natural causes on Feb. 4 while working on a
film called “Retirement” in Miami. Davis was 87 years old when he made his
transition. |
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Sonia Sanchez Performs
“Full Moon” Concert in NYC
by Jamie Walker
http://reviews.aalbc.com/fullmoon.htm
New York—Poet Sonia Sanchez celebrated the release of her new CD called
The Full Moon of Sonia at The Tribeca Performing Arts Center in
Lower Manhattan, New York on Friday December 17, 2004. Countless Sanchez
supporters and followers from around the country came out to hear Sanchez
perform with a live jazz band, a host of beautiful dancers, renowned guest
artists, and phenomenal back-up singers, who strummed their sweet music
around Sanchez’s words of peace, love, and freedom. |
Handling Your Finances –
Lessons from an Author in Transition by Lynnette Khalfani
http://reviews.aalbc.com/handling_your_finances.htmLittle did
Electa Rome Parks know that her unforeseen downsizing in 2003 would actually
serve as a catalyst for her biggest career blessing to date. As it turns
out, getting the axe from Bank of America cut Parks off from corporate
America, but it jumpstarted her literary career: Six months after receiving
a pink slip, Parks went from part-time writer to full-time author, landed a
high-profile literary agent, and got a six-figure book deal with a major
publishing house.
Learn some of the important lesson from Khalfani's article including how
to avoid the pitfalls of print on demand, being a
self-published author and being a mainstream author. |
'Furious
Flower’ Conference Celebrates African American Poetry by
Jamie D. Walker
http://reviews.aalbc.com/furious_flower.htmHarrisonburg,
Virginia—Over sixty distinguished poets and scholars gathered to help “set
the agenda for African American poetry for decades to come” at the historic
“Furious Flower: Regenerating the Black Poetic Tradition Conference.”
Held at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia during the
last weekend in September, the legendary, intergenerational conference
(featuring such poets as Nikki Giovanni, Haki Madhubuti, E. Ethelbert
Miller, Rita Dove, Lucille Clifton, Sonia Sanchez, Amiri Baraka, and
countless others) marks the tenth anniversary of the first Furious Flower
Conference, which was held in 1994.
According to Dr. Joanne Gabbin (Conference Organizer, Professor of
English, and Director of the Honors Program at JMU), the first Furious
Flower Conference “celebrated a century that gave rise to the new Negro
Renaissance and the Black Arts Movement and witnessed the genius of such
poets as Langston Hughes, Sterling Brown, Margaret Walker, Robert Hayden,
and Gwendolyn Brooks.”
The second conference, however, “builds on the tradition” established by
the first by “usher[ing] in the promise of Black poetic expression in the
twenty-first century.” |
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Author
Brenda Thomas Attracts Vast Media Attention
by Audra
Shivers
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/brendaarticle.htm
When I
last spoke with Philly writer
Brenda Thomas,
author of Threesome: Where Seduction, Power and Basketball Collide,
she discussed her experience as a self-published author who had been
discovered by a major New York publisher, Simon & Schuster. Now, nearly one
year later, she discusses her current projects, and shares her thrilling
experience of being sought after by the media.
“It
has been a media blitz!” Thomas says excitedly. One can surmise that her
sudden exposure in the limelight could be attributed to diligent marketing,
a clever storyline, and impeccable luck in timing. Threesome is the
tale of
Sasha Borianni, an
attractive, thirty-something executive secretary who, among other things, is
caught in the middle of the exciting, sexually charged underground of
professional basketball.
Thomas
says that the day news broke regarding Kobe Bryant’s alleged sexual assault
charges, she received a call the following morning from a Dateline
producer to come to New York to be interviewed for their show. Dateline
learned of Thomas and her book through the Internet.
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The Blair Bamboozle A Fiction Writer’s Encounter With Jayson
Blair
by Brian Egeston
http://reviews.aalbc.com/theblairbamboozle.htm
"His nails were grimy. He was unshaven. A thin layer
of hair atop his head brushed some days ago for the first time in a while. A
navy blue off-the-rack suit, too long for his limbs, draped from his body
wrinkled as though he’d just awakened from a nap. A misfit of buttons lined
the sleeve of his jacket. Two buttons in a row, then a broken one, then the
crumb of a button holding on to a single piece of thread. A rayon or
polyester or mixed blend shirt tried its best to camouflage the bulge
leaning over a belt pulled too far through loops. A cardinal sin of fashion
had been committed—black belt brown shoes. Worn over shoes. Shoes curling at
the toe more suited for a ride on magic carpets. Grayish-greenish socks with
the heel turned to the front fit like an accordion around his ankle. He
shifted. Before doing so, I knew it would be there. Dry skin. Ash. The kind
that embarrassed mothers."
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Never Die Alone:
Goines Adaptation Marks Cultural History
by Tracy Grant
http://reviews.aalbc.com/neverdiealone.htm
"Capitalizing on the popularity of hip-hop culture, rap music, and the rise
of urban novels, Fox Searchlight Pictures this month [March 2004] brings
‘Never Die Alone’ – a gritty, realistic look at the world of guns, money,
power and drugs – to the big screen. ‘Never Die Alone’ stars rapper/actor
DMX in an action film set in the shady underworld of street life, where
cunning and violence are the keys to success."
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It's All About Love: Romance
Readers Speak Out
by
Gwendolyn E. Osborne
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/itsallaboutlove.htm
Many
Americans hold preconceived notions about romance fiction without having
read one of these books. Their knowledge of the genre involves perceptions
about Harlequin romances, terms such as "bodice rippers" or "purple prose,"
and book covers with Fabio embracing a blonde, blue-eyed ingénue deep in the
throes of passion. It is widely believed that romance fiction only appeals
to the type of women a Washington Post reporter once called "the bored and
the brain-dead."
Read the Entire
Article
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Former Editor-in-Chief of Essence
Magazine Opens Akwaaba D.C. Inn for Black Writers
by
Jamie Walker
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/akwaaba.htm
Washington,
D.C. — Hundreds of book lovers (in addition to a host of best-selling
authors, literary activists, and media personnel) joined Monique Greenwood,
author and former editor-in-chief of Essence magazine, along with her
husband, Glenn Pogue,
Saturday October 11, 2003,
for the grand opening of Akwaaba D.C. Inn.
Bebe Moore Campbell,
Marita Golden,
Donna Hill,
Bernice McFadden,
Patricia Elam, Stanice Anderson, Asha Bandele, Robin D. Stone, and many
other note-worthy authors, editors, and literary publicists like Vanesse J.
Lloyd-Sgambati were all in attendance to help celebrate what promises to be
an incredible and highly resourceful bed and breakfast Inn for book lovers,
new and published writers.
Akwaaba, which means "welcome" in a language spoken in Ghana, West Africa,
is located at 1708 16th St., N.W., in Washington, D.C., and situated in the
landmark Dupont Circle area of the nation's capitol. Just minutes from
Metro, fine restaurants, shops, a quick tour of the White House or national
mall, Akwaaba D.C. is a stroll away from the historic "U Street," where
legendary African American authors and jazz musicians from the Harlem
Renaissance frequently performed, networked, and convened.
Read The Entire Article
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The Challenge
of Slam
by
Regie Gibson
http://reviews.aalbc.com/the_challenge_of_slam.htm
Through
years of being involved in Slam I have observed some things, which are
disconcerting. However, what has been the most disturbing is how easily so
many of us fall into categories, and how these categories tend to run along
cultural lines. So much so they’ve become as predictable and cliché as a
triple X porn flick. Here are some examples:
Black Male Categories:
The Preacher: (“I have been sent by God to give you this
message, and this is what you must do!”)
The Pimp: (“Watch how I pass a sex poem off as a love poem and
confuse the pornographic for the erotic!”)
The Politician: (An attempt at being Malcolm X, winds up sounding
like Malcolm “why” ex: “Why do white folks keep messing with my people?”
“Why do cops keep beating on me?” Why don’t you white folks give me more
points?”)
The No Contract-Having M.C.: (No need to elaborate)
Read The Entire
Article
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Dakota Grand by Kenji Jasper
Reviewed by
Brian Egeston
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/dakotagrand.htmThere
are codes within creeds and creeds within cliques. Perhaps this is the most
subliminal, if not unintentional, message in Kenji Jasper’s latest offering,
Dakota Grand (Broadway Books: ISBN- 0767910141). The pen name of yet another
young man searching for himself in the world, Dakota Grand embarks upon his
on personal northern migration extracting himself from Atlanta and
transplanting in New York City. It is here where Grand plans to make his
mark as a writer—a hip hop writer no less.
Read The Entire Article |
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