From Library Journal
Like the pirate-turned-judge who was extremely hard on his former compatriots, Crouch, a former Village Voice writer, has collected a series of essays and reviews that portray the U.S. civil rights movement as a "noble movement that went loco." His case consists of anecdotal evidence presented seriatim rather than any systematic presentation within or drawn from a larger framework. Still, there is much that provokes thought in this collection, and the range of topics with which Crouch deals--from the implications of Jesse Jackson's political campaigns to black homosexuality to the treatment of blacks in Pasadena, Texas--is interesting. Readers who miss or choose to ignore the overarching theme of the volume can still find the individual parts worth reading.
- Joseph Stewart Jr., Univ. of Texas at Dallas, RichardsonCopyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
"Eloquent."--
The Washington Times"Provocative....Underlying these verbal flourishes, however, is a tough, learned, analytic prose, in which Crouch, at once more radical and conservative than most African-American critics, challenges and reinterprets the standard line on gender and race relations in America. Through an increasingly uniform chorus of critics, Crouch's voice cuts uncompromisingly clear." . r
"Crouch writes courageously....Crouch is writing not only to or for minorities, but for all Americans....For non-black readers, Crouch provides an uncommonly incisive entry point into the world of black culture for the ignorant outsider. In essay after essay, Crouch's unblinking eye guides the naive, uninitiated reader into the labyrinthine experience of minorities more skillfully than perhaps any other writer since James Baldwin."--
Magill's Literary Annual 1991"Stanley Crouch submits ideas and artistic productions to the 'acid test.' He's a hard task master, on a mission from the spirits to rescue America's intellectual legacy from half-stepping pseudo-intellectual sham artists."--David Earl Jackson,
Tennessee Arts Commission"Behind his dissenter's rhetoric and hangman's mask, Stanley Crouch is actually a benign and eloquent provocateur."--Ralph Ellison
"He is not only provocative but perceptive and, on more than one occasion, wise. In the end it must be said that this is the kind of book you want not merely to read, but to ponder."--
Washington Post Book World"Succeeds in sharing much of the richness and intensity of the life of a contemporary black intellectual, free from what Beryl Markham called the 'cultured fumblings of a mortar-board intelligence.'"--
The New York Times Book Review"A delight for anyone who enjoys good writing in the George Orwell tradition."--
The Brooklyn Free Press"It should be required reading for any who believe that there is any uniformity in the thinking of articulate and thoughtful black writers."--Allan C. Brownfeld,
Washington Inquirer