Ta-Nehisi Coates is the author of The Beautiful Struggle, We Were Eight Years in Power, The Water Dancer, and Between the World and Me, which won the National Book Award in 2015. He is the recipient of a National Magazine Award and a MacArthur Fellowship. He is currently the Sterling Brown endowed chair at Howard University in the English department.
“I’ve been wondering who might fill the intellectual void that
plagued me after James Baldwin died. Clearly it is Ta-Nehisi
Coates. The language of Between the World and Me, like Coates’s
journey, is visceral, eloquent, and beautifully redemptive. And its
examination of the hazards and hopes of black male life is as
profound as it is revelatory. This is required reading.”—Toni
Morrison
“Powerful and passionate . . . profoundly moving . . . a searing
meditation on what it means to be black in America today.”—Michiko
Kakutani, The New York Times
“Really powerful and emotional.”—John Legend, The Wall Street
Journal
“Extraordinary . . . [Coates] writes an impassioned letter to his
teenage son—a letter both loving and full of a parent’s
dread—counseling him on the history of American violence against
the black body, the young African-American’s extreme vulnerability
to wrongful arrest, police violence, and disproportionate
incarceration.”—David Remnick, The New Yorker
“Brilliant . . . a riveting meditation on the state of race in
America . . . [Coates] is firing on all cylinders, and it is
something to behold: a mature writer entirely consumed by a
momentous subject and working at the extreme of his considerable
powers at the very moment national events most conform to his
vision.”—The Washington Post
“An eloquent blend of history, reportage, and memoir written in the
tradition of James Baldwin with echoes of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible
Man . . . It is less a typical memoir of a particular time and
place than an autobiography of the black body in America. . . .
Coates writes with tenderness, especially of his wife, child, and
extended family, and with frankness. . . . Coates’s success, in
this book and elsewhere, is due to his lucidity and innate dignity,
his respect for himself and for others. He refuses to preach or
talk down to white readers or to plead for acceptance: He never
wonders why we just can’t all get along. He knows government
policies make getting along near impossible.”—The Boston Globe
“For someone who proudly calls himself an atheist, Coates gives us
a whole lot of ‘Can I get an amen?’ in this slim and essential
volume of familial joy and rigorous struggle. . . . [He] has become
the most sought-after public intellectual on the issue of race in
America, with good reason. Between the World and Me . . . is at
once a magnification and a distillation of our existence as black
people in a country we were not meant to survive. It is a straight
tribute to our strength, endurance and grace. . . . [Coates] speaks
resolutely and vividly to all of black America.”—Los Angeles
Times
“A crucial book during this moment of generational awakening.”—The
New Yorker
“A work that’s both titanic and timely, Between the World and Me is
the latest essential reading in America’s social
canon.”—Entertainment Weekly
“Coates delivers a beautiful lyrical call for consciousness in the
face of racial discrimination in America. . . . Between the World
and Me is in the same mode of The Fire Next Time; it is a book
designed to wake you up. . . . An exhortation against
blindness.”—The Guardian
“Coates has crafted a deeply moving and poignant letter to his own
son. . . . [His] book is a compelling mix of history, analysis and
memoir. Between the World and Me is a much-needed artifact to
document the times we are living in [from] one of the leading
public intellectuals of our generation. . . . The experience of
having a sage elder speak directly to you in such lyrical, gorgeous
prose—language bursting with the revelatory thought and love of
black life—is a beautiful thing.”—The Root
“Rife with love, sadness, anger and struggle, Between the World and
Me charts a path through the American gauntlet for both the black
child who will inevitably walk the world alone and for the black
parent who must let that child walk away.”—Newsday
“Poignant, revelatory and exceedingly wise, Between the World and
Me is an essential clarion call to our collective conscience. We
ignore it at our own peril.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“Masterfully written . . . powerful storytelling.”—New York
Post
“One of the most riveting and heartfelt books to appear in some
time . . . The book achieves a level of clarity and eloquence
reminiscent of Ralph Ellison’s classic Invisible Man. . . . The
perspective [Coates] brings to American life is one that no
responsible citizen or serious scholar can safely ignore.”—Foreign
Affairs
“Urgent, lyrical, and devastating in its precision, Coates has
penned a new classic of our time.”—Vogue
“Powerful.”—The Economist
“A work of rare beauty and revelatory honesty . . . Between the
World and Me is a love letter written in a moral emergency, one
that Coates exposes with the precision of an autopsy and the force
of an exorcism. . . . Coates is frequently lauded as one of
America’s most important writers on the subject of race today, but
this in fact undersells him: Coates is one of America’s most
important writers on the subject of America today. . . . [He’s] a
polymath whose breadth of knowledge on matters ranging from
literature to pop culture to French philosophy to the Civil War
bleeds through every page of his book, distilled into profound
moments of discovery, immensely erudite but never showy.”—Slate
“The most important book I’ve read in years . . .
an illuminating, edifying, educational, inspiring
experience.”—Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center
“It’s an indescribably enlightening, enraging, important document
about being black in America today. Coates is perhaps the best we
have, and this book is perhaps the best he’s ever
been.”—Deadspin
“Vital reading at this moment in America.”—U.S. News & World
Report
“[Coates] has crafted a highly provocative, thoughtfully presented,
and beautifully written narrative. . . . Much of what Coates writes
may be difficult for a majority of Americans to process, but that’s
the incisive wisdom of it. Read it, think about it, take a deep
breath and read it again. The spirit of James Baldwin lives within
its pages.”—The Christian Science Monitor
“Part memoir, part diary, and wholly necessary, it is precisely the
document this country needs right now.”—New Republic
“A moving testament to what it means to be black and an American in
our troubled age . . . Between the World and Me feels
of-the-moment, but like James Baldwin’s celebrated 1963 treatise
The Fire Next Time, it stands to become a classic on the subject of
race in America.”—The Seattle Times
“Riveting . . . Coates delivers a fiery soliloquy dissecting the
tradition of the erasure of African-Americans beginning with the
deeply personal.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune
“[Between the World and Me] is not a Pollyanna, coming-of-age
memoir about how idyllic life was growing up in America. It is raw.
It is searing. . . . [It’s] a book that should be read and shared
by everyone, as it is a story that painfully and honestly explores
the age-old question of what it means to grow up black and male in
America.”—The Baltimore Sun
“A searing indictment of America’s legacy of violence,
institutional and otherwise, against blacks.”—Chicago Tribune
“I know that this book is addressed to the author’s son, and by
obvious analogy to all boys and young men of color as they pass,
inexorably, into harm’s way. I hope that I will be forgiven, then,
for feeling that Ta-Nehisi Coates was speaking to me, too, one
father to another, teaching me that real courage is the courage to
be vulnerable, to admit having fallen short of the mark, to stay
open-hearted and curious in the face of hate and lies, to remain
skeptical when there is so much comfort in easy belief, to
acknowledge the limits of our power to protect our children from
harm and, hardest of all, to see how the burden of our need to
protect becomes a burden on them, one that we must, sooner or
later, have the wisdom and the awful courage to surrender.”—Michael
Chabon
“Ta-Nehisi Coates is the James Baldwin of our era, and this is his
cri de coeur. A brilliant thinker at the top of his powers, he has
distilled four hundred years of history and his own anguish and
wisdom into a prayer for his beloved son and an invocation to the
conscience of his country. Between the World and Me is an instant
classic and a gift to us all.”—Isabel Wilkerson, author of The
Warmth of Other Suns
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