Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr.
So, just be below, find guide Grant Park, By Leonard Pitts Jr. now as well as check out that promptly. Be the very first to review this e-book Grant Park, By Leonard Pitts Jr. by downloading in the web link. We have other books to check out in this internet site. So, you can locate them additionally quickly. Well, now we have done to supply you the most effective book to check out today, this Grant Park, By Leonard Pitts Jr. is truly suitable for you. Never ever neglect that you need this publication Grant Park, By Leonard Pitts Jr. to make far better life. On-line book Grant Park, By Leonard Pitts Jr. will actually provide easy of everything to read as well as take the benefits.
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr.
Best Ebook PDF Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr.
Grant Park begins in 1968, with Martin Luther King's final days in Memphis. The story then moves to the eve of the 2008 election, and cuts between the two eras as it unfolds. Disillusioned columnist Malcolm Toussaint, fueled by yet another report of unarmed black men killed by police, hacks into his newspaper's server to post an incendiary column that had been rejected by his editors. Toussaint then disappears, and his longtime editor, Bob Carson, is summarily fired within hours of the column's publication. While a furious Carson tries to find Toussaint-at the same time dealing with the reappearance of a lost love from his days as a 60s activist-Toussaint is abducted by two improbable but still-dangerous white supremacists plotting to explode a bomb at Obama's planned rally in Grant Park. Toussaint and Carson are forced to remember the choices they made as idealistic, impatient young men, when both their lives were changed profoundly by their work in the civil rights movement.
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr.- Amazon Sales Rank: #5994966 in Books
- Published on: 2015-10-13
- Formats: Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.40" h x .60" w x 5.30" l,
- Running time: 15 Hours
- Binding: MP3 CD
Review "[I]nfused with vivid characterizations and canny verisimilitude�" ---Kirkus
About the Author Leonard Pitts, Jr., is an award-winning columnist and the author of the novel Before I Forget; the collection Forward From this Moment: Selected Columns, 1994-2009, and Becoming Dad: Black Men and the Journey to Fatherhood.Ron Butler is a Los Angeles-based actor and voice artist with over a hundred film and television credits (playing everything from brooding doctors to screwball hipsters). Ron works regularly as a commercial and animation voice-over artist and has voiced a wide variety of audiobooks.
Where to Download Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr.
Most helpful customer reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Pwerful, Brilliant New Novel Explores Racism in America Today By John Malcolm Toussaint is a haunted man. He was in position to save Martin Luther King from assassination but failed to move fast enough get The civil rights leader out of harm’s way. Only nineteen years old on that fateful balcony in Memphis in April, 1968. The tragedy lodges in his subconscious. Its sting charges back into his awareness whenever he feels he hasn’t tried hard enough – which is most of the time. In his role as an internationally recognized Pulitzer Prize winning columnist for The Chicago Post, Toussaint exhausts himself trying to bring enlightenment and understanding into the racial strife rampant in the United States. Forty years of trying wear him down. Frustration finally wins out.Grant Park by author Leonard Pitts, Jr. follows Malcolm Toussaint, a young, bright African-American, along with several of his contemporaries, through the decades beginning with the King assassination and culminating in Barack Obama’s 2008 triumph as the first African-American to be elected President.The book begins on the eve of the election. Convinced Obama cannot win, Toussaint rips off a column that screams of his despair with white America. When his white editor, Bob Carlson, refuses to print it, Toussaint goes over his head to Lydia Barnett, the African-American Editor-in-Chief. “ Do not play more black than thou with me,” she scolds, realizing the Toussaint piece is too inflammatory. Toussaint storms off, downs a few beers and returns late at night, armed with Carlson’s password to the composition room, and plugs his column into the front page despite his editors’ rejections.Readers, especially those whose first vote was cast for JFK, will be gripped immediately by this fast paced story. Toussaint’s inflammatory column may leave some liberal oldsters wondering why the fuss. Haven’t we all tired of the bulls***? Perhaps that’s easier to write in 2015 than 2008, but for those dreadfully disheartened over Ferguson, Baltimore, Eric Garner, the continued rash of police shootings, Toussaint’s column speaks for everyone who has hoped for more.The paper reacts by firing Bob Carlson, the 59 year old editor who gave away his password. With Carlson, Pitts begins another compelling story. Carlson, an idealistic, fundamentalist Christian, white kid from Minnesota, falls in love with a beautiful, bright African-American girl, Janeka Lattimore, and the two work diligently to increase voter registration. Both are children of the 1960's, the kids that Pitts describes as:Young men and women with big Afros and Jewfros and long blonde locks and strident voices singing songs of peace and love and revolution, a whole generation of them, fresh and raw, untainted by the failures and compromises of their parents' generation, utterly convinced that they were something this old world had never seen, a new people thinking new thoughts that had never been thought before.In 1968, their relationship required courage. Yet, many things go their way. Carlson’s family is gracious, supportive and accepting. It is not enough, however.“I have to be with my people,” she shouts in breaking up with Bob.“I thought I was your people, too,” he replies.Janeka doesn’t break up with Carson, instead, as Pitts writes, “She breaks him.” Carlson never engages in any kind of romance again. He becomes an "inside the lines" kind of a guy. Pitts writes, "His faith seemed to have gone the way of his empathy."Pitts is a master of timing. Just when the reader expects Toussaint to face his editors about the way he shanghaied the front page, he is abducted by two white low-life racists who plan to explode a bomb in Grant Park when President-Elect Barack Obama appears to make his acceptance speech. Thus begins the first probing explication of one dimension of the racial conflict examined by Pitts; i.e. bottom of the barrel whites versus top of the barrel blacks. The first bottom of barrel white introduced is Clarence Pym, a huge man because of gigantism. Pym metaphorically represents rampant, irrational, bloated white racism. Pym is the part of racism white America does not want to do anything about. All the more indicting is that Pym actually has a conscience. He befriends his Toussaint, his captive, by conversing about the neutral subjects -- the no-race zone -- of sport and popular music. The choice of character's name must be deliberate. Pym is so close to Prim (as in prim and proper, a connotation reinforced by the image presented of the man's home fastidiously maintained by his mother) it suggests that friendly banter, as exchanged between Pym and Toussaint, cannot be taken as an indication that all is well. Prejudice lurks beneath the pleasantries. Ostracized most of his life because of his bulk, is the pawn for nasty, deranged Dwayne McLarry. McLarry is the irrational, murderous side of white racism, incapable of empathy. These two severely limited human beings form the WRS, the White Resistance Army, and hold up Timothy McVeigh as an idol.Lower economic level blacks are represented by Toussaint’s father, a Memphis sanitation worker whose singular demand is to be treated as a human being. His protest sign proclaims, “I AM A Man.” His son, a black power advocate, derides his father’s efforts as anemic. The march by the sanitation workers in Memphis bring father and son together, and though they differ with regard to how the protests should be conducted, they become reconciled. The old man says, "Seem like just recently here, first time in my life, I done finally figured out who I been mad at all the time."Pitts dramatizes all the diseased levels of the conflict between the races when Toussaint makes his explanation to his African-American boss, Lydia Barnett. Barnett, being black, understands what it is that has so exhausted her columnist.It is the near instinctual recognition that we differ, and the difference, despite all evidence to the contrary, is not to be trusted. Or as Lattimore explains, "It's like walking around your whole life with a pebble in your shoe that you know you can never remover." It is the reason the lab technician let you wait in the lobby. Why the cabbie passed you by. Why you did not get the promotion. It is still there, every day, living in the minds of white and black alike and differs only in degree. “Black people,” Malcolm reflects, “often cited race to explain stuff race had nothing to do with.” Pitts demonstrates repeatedly that the same holds true for whites.In the same setting, Lattimore confronts the white complacency in Carlson, " . . . white people always think having a fine car or nice clothes or money or social standing puts you beyond racism -- and it doesn't. That's the whole point. That's why its racism."Grant Park is a brilliant work. The only detracting flaw is one most readers will not notice. Park fails too frequently to maintain the integrity – the metaperspective – of his narrator. An omniscient narrator speaks about characters, but never for them. When, for example, the vicious, white-supremacist McLarry wants to shoot a cab driver, a sentence reads: “He really wanted to shoot the prick.” The sentence is in the author’s voice until the word “prick.” “Prick” is McLarry’s word. McLarry jumps the narrator’s line – hijacks it. Characters jump the narrator’s lines again and again. The result is distracting and weakens the authority of the narrator’s voice.A thoroughly credible plot is marred only when readers need to assume that McLarry, high on meth, knows Carlson on sight when he finds the editor lunching with Lattimore in an upscale restaurant. The deranged killer didn't know editor's name hours earlier at the newspaper office.As to his power, Pitts rises frequently to the level of pure poetry. Consider one example: “A fatigue older than rivers rode the curve of a closed smile.” Readers are treated to lines like this throughout.His description of the riots in Memphis from, not one, but three points of view, is riveting. Lattimore and Carlson run for the safety. Toussaint’s father despairs at the chaos that is ruining his protest. Toussaint joins in the vandalism only later to regret his actions. Pitts’ characters are believable, deep and richly human. He writes with confidence in the voices of his young, his old, his white and his non-white characters.Grant Park is a monumental work, so all-encompassing in scope that reviewers will be hard-pressed to do it justice. Pitt’s passion for a solution holds strong to the end of his novel even as his central character seems to give up. Readers will find Grant Park is real. From beginning to end it shows us an illness that seems to defy a cure. Perhaps as our children play together, the day will one day arrive when, despite even our slightest misgivings, we will recognize the humanity in one another. Pitts is there. He, for one, has shown that we are the same.This review appeared initially in a somewhat condensed form on the web site bookpleasures.comJohn J Hohn -- Author of Deadly Portfolio and Breached
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Grant Park is a great thought provoking novel. Mr. Leonard Pitts, Jr. keeps it 100...believe it ! By Harvey Because I, like millions of other boomers, was a teenager when Dr. King was assassinated, to the election of Barack Obama, this great novel peals back the skin of racial misunderstandings in America. How simple facts can be viewed so differently in this " great melting pot" we call America. This novel is not the emotional drama as Freeman [by Mr. Pitts] which is one of my all time favorite novels, Grant Park is so reflective of current events, social misunderstandings, human ignorance, and unbelievable behavior by some in our society you would think it was written yesterday. I could not help but think will our country ever get past racial hatred in my life time. Yet at the same time the love and care of some of the individuals that are a part of this fast paced thriller keeps you reading chapter after chapter not wanting to put it down until completed. At this time I can only say I hope Mr. Pitts has already started on his next project. Thank you for such a thought provoking novel. JSH
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Race in America By Angela of Color Me Purple "Grant Park" begins in 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee, where a young, angry and rebellious Malcolm Toussaint has a conversation with the most important figure of the Civil Rights Movement--Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Grant Park plunges ahead to Election Day in Chicago, Illinois, 2008--Senator Barack Hussein Obama is the Democratic nominee for President of the United States of America. If elected, Obama would become the nation's first African-American President. However, Chicago's award-winning Black columnist Malcolm Toussaint refuses to believe he can win.Leonard Pitts, Jr. weaves this tragic and poignant tale of RACE in America with his signature flip-flopping between the main character's past and his present. This flashback -to-flash forward technique has served Pitts well in all three of his novels.The 2008 Malcolm Toussaint has written and "published" a nixed "I am tired of white folks' mess" editorial that will certainly ruin his career and take down others on this historic Election Day. Then he disappears! Voting Rights, Police Violence, Hate Crimes, Gun Control, Race Relations--Pitts makes his readers consider how little and how much has changed in this country--"indivisible with Liberty and Justice for all!
See all 31 customer reviews... Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr.Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr. PDF
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr. iBooks
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr. ePub
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr. rtf
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr. AZW
Grant Park, by Leonard Pitts Jr. Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar