Finished The Fire Next Time, my first Baldwin book. The first letter, Letter to my Nephew, is where Ta-nehisi Coates got the inspiration from BTWAM and it shows. The letter here is much shorter, only 9 Kindle pages and then there's another dealing with religion.
The Letter to His Nephew hit me in the same way BTWAM did, it's just sad that it had to be written at all man. I'll say this though, what interested me was that Baldwin, writing in the 60s, was more optimistic in the tackling of the problem than Coates is today, whatever that says about how things have gone.
"And if the word integration means anything, this is what it means: that we, with love, shall force our brothers to see themselves as they are, to cease fleeing from reality and begin to change it. For this is your home, my friend, do not be driven from it; great men have done great things here, and will again, and we can make America what America must become."
I guess after 30 years, Coates has given up on people being woken up.
In the second letter, he speaks on how his religion and feelings on religion affected him coming up and how he sees it. He said some things that jumped out at me because they are as relevant and true today as they were the day he wrote them. I liked this one a lot as well.
Not sure what's up next, I'm deciding between Dreams from My Father (Obama), Autobiography of Malcolm X (Him and Haley), Notes of a Native Son (Baldwin again) or Black Boy or Native Son by Richard Wright. I'm trying to maintain some kind of continuity, Baldwin specifically spoke of Malcolm X in The Fire but he also said Wright was the best in the world so I might end up there.
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