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Books : Black Misery (Iona and Peter Opie Library of Children's Literature)


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by: Langston Hughes







Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 818.5202
EAN: 9780195142983
ISBN: 0195142985
Label: Oxford University Press, USA
Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 72
Publication Date: January 04, 2001
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Reading Level: Ages 4-8
Sales Rank: 714753
Studio: Oxford University Press, USA






Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Black Misery was first published in 1969, but the gentle, funny, and sometimes melancholy words of Langston Hughes still cause a blink of recognition. After 25 years, it remains relevant in our own time. As you turn the pages you may say, 'I remember feeling like that!' You may say, 'I feel like that now.'
As you look at Arouni's black and white illustrations and read the short but powerful one sentence captions, you feel the predicament of a black child adjusting to the new world of integration of the 1960s. You feel the mix of hope and dismay that characterized the decade.
Langston Hughes was a writer who often made his readers ask hard questions about life. In Black Misery he wrote about prejudice and indifference, but he wrote with humor and compassion. Today--just as we did 25 years ago-we smile and even laugh, and we also understand that some things are more than hard, are more than sad. They are pure misery.
Black Misery was the last book that Langston Hughes wrote. He died in May 1967, while working on the manuscript.



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A Book about Privilege for Adults and Children
Most white people rarely think about racial discrimination except as something that happened "back then" "down south". We're (I write this as a white man) far more likely to whine about "reverse discrimination," about how unfair affirmative action is and how confusing PC speech has become (Are "they" black, African-Americans, people of color or *what* ?). We tend to think of black people three ways:

1) We see them as white people with extra pigmentation. We don't really notice any difference ... Read More




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