[JAMES BALDWIN, AFRICAN AMERICANA, SOCIAL JUSTICE ]


BALDWIN, James  (Author)

"NO NAME IN THE STREET"

New York. The Dial Press. 1972. First Edition. Octavo. 197 pp. Original cream cloth, with pictorial black dust jacket. Unclipped ('$5.95'), portrait of Baldwin on rear panel. Minor crease to rear jacket.  A sharp, crisp, square copy. Overall, near fine or better.

A group of historical essays by one of America's best observers of social culture and class. 

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No Name in the Street is American writer and poet James Baldwin's fourth non-fiction book, first published in 1972. Baldwin describes his views on several historical events and figures: Francisco Franco, McCarthyism, the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver, and the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. The book also covers the Algerian War and Albert Camus' take on it.

Baldwin recounts the Harlem that shaped his early consciousness and the later murders of his friends Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, along with his stay in Europe and in Hollywood and his return to the American South to confront a violent America.

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