James Baldwin’s Notes for the Sons and Daughters of Amhara
I take a lot of comfort these days in reading the essays of James Baldwin. As much as his key subject for nonfiction was the situation for Black Americans, you don’t have to be Black to appreciate him, and his eloquence hits you again and again with a laser-like focus and familiarity of what it means to be a human being.
Having years past plowed through …
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