They have a decent section of used vinyl and CDs.
Wednesday, August 7, 2024
McKay's Books Mebane NC
They have a decent section of used vinyl and CDs.
Sunday, August 4, 2024
Book Review: Afro-6
5 / 5 stars
Let's wrap up our 'Some Tough City' celebration with 'Afro-6,' a 1969 novel from Dell.
This novel is a member of a small, but significant, genre of 'what if' novels and short stories dealing with black takeovers / revolutions, one prominent example being Edwin Corley's 1970 novel 'Siege.' Also worth searching out are Robert Silverberg's 1970 story 'Black is Beautiful,' and Joe Hensley's 1973 story 'In Dark Places.'
Author Enrique Hank Lopez (1920 - 1985) was a Mexican-born author and, according to his obituary in the Los Angeles Times, the first Chicano to graduate from Harvard Law School.
Lopez published a number of books, on varied topics, in the 1970s and 1980s. These topics including the Andes plane crash survivors ('They Lived on Human Flesh !', 1973), the racial and educational politics of social advancement ('The Harvard Mystique', 1979), Indian mysticism ('The Hidden Magic of Uxmal', 1980) and a biography of writer Katherine Anne Porter ('Conversations With Katherine Anne Porter: Refugee from Indian Creek,' 1981).
'Afro-6' is not an easy novel to acquire. At amazon, the bookjackers have it listed at prices ranging from $175 to $295. At eBay, a vendor is advertising a 'like new' copy for $375 ('or best offer'). I remember getting my copy some four years ago, for a lot less money than that.
What, exactly, is 'Afro-6' ? Well, according to first-person narrator John Rios,
Dig. Dig this - I belong to a secret task force that's taking over New York City within the next ten days. Not all of the city, mind you, just the island of Manhattan. First of all, we'll isolate this miserable ofay town by destroying all the bridges and bottling up the tunnels connecting it to the surrounding metropolitan area. Then we're going to squeeze whitey into a very tight corner, man.
It's the early 70s, and a group of black revolutionaries are plotting to paralyze the U.S. with a series of riots and demonstrations, these part of an ambitious effort to take control of Manhattan, and use its possession to extort / leverage a black homeland from the federal government. Meticulous planning has gone into every aspect of Afro-6, and at 6 p.m. on October 1, it all goes down.
For Rios, who is a black Puerto Rican, the revolution is an opportunity to end the oppression of black and brown people, and stick it to whitey. Not that Rios necessarily hates white people as individuals; he has had white, Jewish, liberals as lovers, colleagues, and friends. But he hates the white power structure, it's long past time for the honkys to be shown the error of their ways.
The narrative regularly switches from the first-person perspective of Rios to the third-person perspective of Alan Geller, a friend of Rios's from their college days at Harvard. Geller provides the novel with a 'white' perspective that is sympathetic towards the black power movement.
I'm not going to spoil anything, but I will say that roughly halfway through the novel's 237 pages, Afro-6 does indeed 'go off.' And the entire nation is going to witness the depth of black rage.............
I give 'Afro-6' a Five Star Rating, because it's a well-plotted thriller. Author Lopez infuses ideology into the narrative, but avoids giving the novel a hectoring tone. There are some well-written action / combat sequences, and a healthy amount of caustic humor; one of the best examples of such, describes white liberals attending a rally held by a black militant named 'Abdul X.' As Abdul excoriates the white attendees, these revel in their abasement.
If you can find an 'affordable' copy of Afro-6 it's well worth getting. It would be nice if, at some point in the future, a reprint of the novel can be introduced to the reading public, perhaps through something like W. W. Norton's Old School Books imprint from the 1990s.
To paraphrase the diction in 'Afro-6,' I'm sure even honkys will dig the vibes of this novel !
Thursday, August 1, 2024
Penthouse August 1972
August 1972
Sunday, July 28, 2024
Book Review: The Compound
Thursday, July 25, 2024
HVAC Reading July 2024
Tuesday, July 23, 2024
Book Review: City Dogs
The narrative emphasizes telling, rather than showing, and as a result, readers will need to endure lengthy internal monologues, and passages describing the internal torments and dilemmas, of the personages with whom Harry interacts. These passages become increasingly tedious as the novel unfolds.
I won’t disclose any spoilers, save to say that the characters in ‘City Dogs’ are not particularly likeable, and by the time I reached the final chapters, I was rather indifferent to their fates.
Summing up, ‘City Dogs’ is a middling effort at an urban noir novel. If you are fond of novels set on the mean streets of Chicago, then you may find it worthwhile, but those looking for exemplars of American Realism from the 1970s are directed to Richard Price’s 1974 novel ‘The Wanderers,’ or Vern E. Smith’ 1974 novel ‘The Jones Men’.
Sunday, July 21, 2024
The Ghetto Brothers Power Fuerza
Thursday, July 18, 2024
Book Review: The Seventh Power
James Mills (1932 - 2011) wrote a number of novels set in the grimier milieu of New York City. He is best known for his 1966 novel 'The Panic in Needle Park,' which was made in to a 1971 film starring Al Pacino, and his 1972 novel 'Report to the Commissioner,' which was a bestseller and also turned into a film. 'The Power' (1990) is a cold war spy novel. One of Mills's most celebrated books, the nonfiction 'The Underground Empire' (1986) later was the subject of an expose in the Los Angeles Times, whose investigation revealed that some of the book's content was fabricated or misrepresented.
'Seventh' is set in late 70s New York City. Lead character Adelaide, aka 'Aizy' (her surname never is disclosed) is a brilliant but deeply troubled girl from a wealthy family. As a student at Princeton, she becomes infatuated with soul brother Bobby Fletcher. Bobby persuades Aizy to sign on to a conspiracy: make an atomic bomb, and use it to extort a comittment from the U.S. government to address poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa.
To acquire plutonium for the bomb, Bobby recruits a street criminal named 'Stoop' Youngblood. Together, the three conspirators set up shop in a decaying tenement building. Aizy knows her physics, and her engineering, and crafting a low-yield nuke in the kitchen is not all that difficult. And when the trio announce their intentions, and their ransom demands, to the authorities, life for people living in what could be a Manhattan nuclear detonation zone is going to get very, very interesting.....
The first half of 'Seventh' is an engaging read, as author Mills goes about setting up the characters and the plot via short, to-the-point chapters suffused with ironic humor. The descriptions of assembling a 'kitchen sink' atomic bomb have the verisimilitude necessary to grant credibility to the idea of nuclear blackmail. Where the narrative loses momentum, however, is in the final third of the novel, where - the authorities having been given an Ultimatum - we are treated to page after page of terse, declarative Police Procedural text:
"So what's the alternative ?"
"Get between her and the bomb. Get the damned thing away from her."
"Ideas ?"
Two of the men started quarreling and two others moved away and conferred in whispers. Ransom heard the word 'ambassador,' and one of them, a young, scrubbed, red-headed man in a blue blazer, left the room.
Random sat down and someone called in Dusko. He said his boss, the DA, was on the way in from Long Island.
"We can't wait," Carrol said, and began a discussion Ransom didn't hear.
This 'standing around and talking' stuff goes on too long, and contributes little save narrative padding. I won't disclose any spoilers about the novel's denouement, save to say that when it finally does arrive, it allows the author to have his cake, and eat it too.
'The Seventh Power' is a solid, but not overly memorable 1970s New York City crime / thriller novel. If you like that genre, and novels such as 'The Black Death,' and 'The Taking of Pelham One Two Three', it may appeal to you.
Tuesday, July 16, 2024
Penthouse July 1986
Does anyone remember the 'Pony' shoe brand ?! They were big in the 80s. I never bought any Pony shoes, I always was comfortable with Adidas or Nike.
In the July issue, publisher Bob Guccione makes clear his alarm and disgust over the actions of the Reagan administration's Attorney General, Edwin Meese, who in July of '86 published 'The Meese Report' on pornography.
Guccione was quite hostile towards Meese and the latter's efforts to curtail 'adult' magazine distribution. While the Report did not do all that much in terms of enacting federal laws to curtail porn distribution per se, it did scare many outlets into discontinuing magazine sales; for example, in April of '86, 7-11 stores stopped selling Penthouse and Forum, a move that obviously cut into Guccione's bottom line. The July issue of Penthouse had an article that was (unsurprisingly) very critical of Meese.
Turning now to the stuff that Meese didn't approve of, the Penthouse Forum still is going strong. After all, everything in the Forum was 100% true !
Probably the best pictorial in the July issue is the one featuring a German lass named Helga. She likes "...a foaming stein of Bavarian beer," and believes "...one man is enough for me."
As part of his campaign to cast Ed Meese and the Reagan administration as fanatics who were denying Americans freedom of expression, and Penthouse as a patriotic manifestation of the 1st Amendment, Guccione has an artsy pictorial of the Statue of Liberty.
The accompanying essay by sci-fi writer Isaac Asimov lends big-name credibility to the pictorial (then again, we know Asimov wasn't above doing a little bit of his own 'spicy' stuff now and then). However, Asimov's essay is less about freedom, or even the Statue of Liberty, and more about the need to construct space colonies (?!) since these are places that would be free from the mores and attitudes of people like Meese..........
Let's close our overview of the July issue with some rather lowbrow cartoons......all part of the fun, in that long-ago Summer of '86.