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Birth of a Nation: A Comic Novel
 
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Birth of a Nation: A Comic Novel [Paperback]

Aaron McGruder (Author), Reginald Hudlin (Author), Kyle Baker (Illustrator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)


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Book Description

1400083168 978-1400083169 February 22, 2005
This scathingly hilarious political satire—produced from a collaboration of three of our funniest humorists—answers the burning question: Would anyone care if East St. Louis seceded from the Union?

East St. Louis, Illinois (“the inner city without an outer city”), is an impoverished town, so poor that Fred Fredericks, its idealistic mayor, starts off Election Day by collecting the city’s trash in his own minivan. But the mayor believes in the power of democracy and rallies his fellow citizens to the polls for the presidential election, only to find hundreds of them turned away for trumped-up reasons. Even sweet old Miss Jackson—not to mention the mayor himself—is denied the vote because her name turns up on a bogus list of felons. The national election hinges on Illinois’s electoral votes and, as a result of the mass disenfranchisement of East St. Louis, a radical right-wing junta led by a dim-witted Texas governor seizes the Oval Office.

Prodded by shady black billionaire and old friend John Roberts, Fredericks devises a radical plan of protest: East St. Louis will secede from the Union. Roberts opens an “offshore” bank (albeit in the heart of the U.S.) to finance the newly liberated country, and suddenly East St. Louis becomes the Switzerland of the American heartland, flush with money. It also begins to attract a motley circus of idealistic young militants, OPEC-funded hitmen, CIA operatives, tabloid reporters, and AWOL black servicemen eager to protect and serve the new nation.

Problems set in almost immediately: Controversies rage over the name and national anthem of the new country (they decide on the Republic of Blackland with an anthem sung to the tune of the theme from Good Times), and local thug Roscoe becomes a warlord and turns his gang into a paramilitary force. When the U.S. military begins to move in, Fredericks is forced to decide whether his protest is worth taking all the way.

Birth of a Nation starts with a scenario drawn from the botched election of 2000 and spins it into a brilliantly absurd work of sharply pointed satire. Along the way the authors lay into a host of hot social and cultural issues—skewering white supremacists, black nationalists, and everyone in between—drawing real blood and real laughs in equal measure in this riotous send-up of American politics.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The Boondocks creator McGruder, filmmaker Hudlin and Why I Hate Saturn cartoonist Baker are a kind of dream team, and this work (drawn in Baker's animation-storyboard style) has a fairly hilarious premise. When the virtually all-black population of East St. Louis, Ill., is disenfranchised en masse in electoral shenanigans that result in a George W. Bush–like Texan governor being elected president, the impoverished city decides to secede from the U.S. Renaming itself "Blackland," the city becomes a wildly rich money-laundering capital. Baker is a gifted caricaturist—every facial expression and bit of body language he comes up with is funny—and the first two-thirds of the book is loaded with witty riffs (a national anthem to the tune of the Good Times theme; a fight over whether Tupac or Biggie should be on the nickel) and slyly ferocious jabs at institutional racism and a certain commander-in-chief. The final act, though, falls apart. The U.S. going to war with Blackland over a new alternative energy source should be a natural for comedy, but it bogs down in too-serious drama and a non sequitur battle. even McGruder and Hudlin's snappy dialogue loses steam. The work has the air of an unproduced film treatment—a terrific concept with some impressive talent behind it but not enough follow-through to make it completely satisfying.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

A Texas governor wins the presidency when some 1,000 blacks are barred from voting because of phony felony convictions, and the Supreme Court endorses that outcome. So the mayor of East St. Louis, home of the disfranchised, takes the famously poor, black-majority burg out of the union. With money from one old pal (now a billionaire) and the prowess of another (now a jet-fighter pilot) and administrative aid from the youthful New African People's Party and, heading the new nation's military, gang boss Roscoe, Mayor Fred Fredericks, first seen collecting trash in lieu of a bankrupt sanitation department, keeps pulling rabbits out of hats throughout an unpredictable, frequently hilarious satire reminiscent of the great 1940s moviemaker Preston Sturges' best stuff. In fact, film writer-director Reginald Hudlin brainstormed the story with The Boondocks comic strip creator McGruder as a prospective movie, turning, after big-fish producers failed to bite, to ace comics artist Kyle Baker for this graphic novel, which, despite screenplay origins that have been incompletely sanded down, remains highly entertaining. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Three Rivers Press (February 22, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400083168
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400083169
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 8 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #715,778 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

42 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Impressive, July 20, 2004
Leading up to purchasing "Birth of a Nation" I was unsure about the direction the book would take. From the previews I read,(and the direction that "The Boondocks" has taken post 9/11) I was anticipating a heavy-handed, Michael Moore style beatdown of the Bush administration. Not that I am dissapprove of sticking it to GW (and his cabinet) at every opportunity. I just figured that this book be a case of preaching to the crowd.

Much to my delight, "Birth of a Nation" not only provides biting social satire, but a rich story line and vibrant characters. This reminds me why I started reading the boondocks in the first place and why McGruder was hailed as a wunderkind when he first entered the comic world. I don't think anyone slept on Bebe's Kids or the House party, but Hudlin has been doing it big for a while now. The brilliance of Mcgruder and Hudlin has to go alongside other prominent duos of our generation: EPMD, Outkast, Madvillain. I was not previously familiar with Kyle Baker's work, but his illustrations are definately on point. The style is similar to the way Bebe's Kids was drawn.(in case some were expecting The Boondocks' anime/manga style of illustration)

Not only putting the Bush administration of blast, "Birth Of a Nation" pokes fun at several areas of the Black community(generational gap, nationalism, materialism). I imagine that this book would be hard to follow if you are not immersed in Hip Hop culture. If you avoid rap music and Spike Lee movies this book might not be for you. Otherwise, if you enjoy Dave Chappelle, okayplayer.com, and Ego Trip's Big Book of Racism/Rap lists, I guarantee you will enjoy it.

Bonus points for finding

- find lyrics from Mobb Deep and Notorious BIG songs
-grown up versions Jazmine, Caesar, and Riley
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ain't we lucky we got it!, September 13, 2004
By 
What's the story behind the story? Well, movie director Reginald Hudlin and comic strip creator Aaron McGruder were hanging out together at the San Diego Comic Book Convention. They were trying to come up with an idea for a movie, when Hudlin suggested the idea of his hometown of East St. Louis seceding from the United States. They wrote a script based on that idea, but they couldn't get a movie studio to make the film. So, rather than just let the script sit on the shelf, they decided to turn it into a graphic novel. Rather than have McGruder draw it himself, they got the brilliant Kyle Baker to illustrate it. So, how is the final result? It's great, in my opinion. It's a very funny book with great movie storyboard style illustrations. No doubt it will seem funnier to a liberal than it would to a conservative. But anyone who enjoys Aaron McGruder's Boondocks comic strip should also enjoy this book.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It Takes a Nation, September 30, 2004
By 
The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers (RAWSISTAZ.com and BlackBookReviews.net) - See all my reviews
At one time or another, many have heard of the sentiment "we should have our own" from the Black community. Well Aaron McGruder, creator of the highly acclaimed comic strip The Boondocks and Reginald Hudlin writer/director of the all too funny House Party, have teamed up to give readers their impression on what having our own would be like in the social satire BIRTH OF A NATION, illustrated by Kyle Baker. The comic novel pokes fun at different areas of the Black community such as nationalism, materialism and the generational gap.

The book opens with an illustration displaying the stark contrast between St Louis and East St. Louis. As I viewed the illustrations, I did not find it hard to believe that the depiction was more of an accurate assessment rather than just the artist view. As the fictional mayor Fred Fredricks of East St. Louis rounds up the citizens to vote, they are turned away because they are all listed as convicted felons - including the mayor. This along with the persuasive tactics of the multi-billionaire, John Roberts, who has his own agenda, Fredricks decides to secede the Union.

As the Republic of Blackland is formed, the citizens can not come to agreements on the flag, the national anthem, or whose face will appear on the paper money and coins. The flag that is chosen to represent them is a picture of a White Jesus Christ on a red, black and green background. The national anthem is sung to the melody of "Good Times," and it is a toss up between rappers Biggie Smalls and Tupac Shakur for the face of the nickel. To counteract their efforts to secede the Union, the president and his cabinet shut down the welfare office, the unemployment office and the post office, which means no unemployment checks, no welfare checks, and no social security checks. Can you imagine the civil unrest?

This social/political satire, although funny, made me think - how would the Black community handle "having our own," and how would those efforts be thwarted by the powers that be. I don't think it would be far-fetched from the ideas and antics presented here. After reading BIRTH OF A NATION, it should make you go hmmmm.

Reviewed by Aiesha Flowers
of The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers
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