logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: fifth-blight
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
text 2019-02-16 20:20
A case of the reading blahs
Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom - David W. Blight

Given this this is Glorify White Male Leadership President's Day weekend, I wanted to spend it reading something appropriate. Unfortunately the book on the 1952 presidential election that I ordered through Inter-Library Loan did not arrive in time, so I find myself a little adrift. I have two books in progress, but as both of them are related to assignments, I wanted to read something that didn't feel so obligatory.

 

The first book I turned to was David Blight's new Frederick Douglass biography, but while it's proving a fantastic book it's not really fitting my mood. The reading project I'm contemplating (which I'm increasingly inclined to undertake) has me wanting to start reading something about an English monarch, but unfortunately I don't have anything at hand. Instead I'm settling for one about a British politician, which so far seems to be fitting the bill.

Like Reblog Comment
text 2019-02-02 13:02
My February reading idiocy
Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom - David W. Blight

Last year I started to use the various holidays and commemorations as opportunities to read more about the subjects being celebrated. It began with last year's Black History Month, during which I read Jeffrey Stewart's superb biography of Alain Locke, and I followed up with similar efforts during Women's History Month and Labor Day weekend. I'm really coming to enjoy the experience, too, as it pushes me to explore areas of the past that I don't give the attention I should.

 

A couple of weeks ago, I decided that for Black History Month this year I would read David W. Blight's new biography of Frederick Douglass. I've wanted to read it ever since I learned he was writing it; he's a fantastic historian, and the acclaim which it has received since its release has suggested that it is every bit as good as I'm expecting it to be. I checked out a copy earlier this week, and it now sits on a table awaiting to be read.

 

Only I don't know if I'll be able to get to it anytime soon.

 

This, of course, is a problem entirely of my own making. A month ago I found myself in one of my periodic reviewing droughts in terms of podcast interviewing. I contacted a few authors, then a couple more when I didn't receive any responses to my initial requests, only to get a sudden flurry of acceptances when nearly all of them replied to accept my interview offers — just after I agreed to two proposals from the site editor to interview authors who contacted him about interviews. Because of this, I have no less than eight interviews in various stages of preparation, and I'm committed to doing five of them this month alone. It's not an unmanageable load, but when combined with my other reading commitments it doesn't leave me much time for nearly 900 pages about Douglass, no matter how badly I want to read about him.

 

Gaah, why do I do this to myself?

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2018-06-16 20:56
Out in Oct
Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom - David W. Blight

Disclaimer: ARC via Netgalley

We like, want, our heroes to be uncompleted, to always be heroic and constant while in the spotlight, and to leave that spotlight before they change politics or ideals. We want to remember Lincoln as the great emancipator not as the man who at one point wanted all freed slaves to return to Africa, a place they had never seen. That ruins the image of martyr Lincoln. We have the same feeling of many of our heroes, including Frederick Douglass.

Who despite what some people think is, in fact, dead. Perhaps the memory of Douglass is doing great things in a symbolical sense, but the actual man is long dust.

For most people, Douglass is the man who escaped slavery and publicly spoke out against it. Some people even confuse him with Henry “Box” Brown. Many students read Douglass either his Autobiography, or perhaps more commonly, the selection detailing his learning to read. The drawback to the commonly used selection is that it is many times the student’s only reading of Douglass, who sometimes some students think is a woman who is having sex with her mistress.

People today have heard of Douglass, but they don’t know of Frederick Douglass.

David W. Blight corrects that in his massive, though it does not read that way, new biography of Douglass.

Perhaps the hardest part of any Douglass biography is the reconstruction of his early life. This isn’t because of a lack of memoirs, but a surfeit of them, including subtle but important differences. Did he ask to be taught or did Sophia Auld teach him because of her own idea? A combination of both perhaps? Blight’s reconstructing of Douglass’s early life makes it clear when there is a question about what happened, where Douglass himself differs or where scholars raise questions. He does not choose sides; he deals with facts and context. A refreshing thing.

It is also something that he uses when dealing with Douglass’s relationship to his first wife Anna Murray, a free black woman who played a central role in Douglass’s escaping slavery. Murray was illiterate, not stupid, but illiterate as common for many people than. She and Douglass married soon after his escape, and they stayed married until her death. She birthed his children, she gave him a home to return to. Sadly, we do not know what she thought about her husband, about his relationship with the white women who would stay at her house, or about his feelings towards her for she is left out of his writing – much of interior family life seems to be. Blight, it seems, is slightly frustrated by this mystery of Anna Murray, and in the beginning, it almost seems like he is being, not condescending or dismissive, but almost shrugging off, not an accurate description but close. As the biography progress, however, you become grateful and happy that Blight does not presume to know what Anna Murray would think. He does suggest authors that try to channel her, but Blight keeps her presence as a real woman, almost shaking his head at Douglass’s silence. It helps that he keeps Douglass’s second wife, Helen Pitts, off page for much of the time as well.

Blight’s depiction of Douglass is within the context of his time and dealing with those who see contradictions and problems in who Douglass was – such as his expansionist tendencies, his view on Native Americans. Blight presents an imperfect human, as all humans are, but presents him with understanding and a feeling of fascination that are easily transmitted to the reader.

Like Reblog Comment
review 2018-03-24 02:53
Blight
Blight - Alexandra Duncan

It was a great book that had an interesting plot and kept me up late reading but if someone I knew where to read it I would not feel the need to spoil it. There where many twists but about half of them I could predict. This was not my favorite book but I really enjoyed it and overall it ranks high on the list of all books I have read. I recommend it to anyone who likes to read subtly distopian si-fi.  

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2016-07-19 15:24
Prequel to the other Mage titles by Karen Miller – a good but perhaps overlong yarn
A Blight of Mages - Karen Miller


 

This book leads into the Kingmaker, Kingbreaker and Fisherman's children series and explains about magic in those books. The plot dwells on Dorana's magic and mages and how it is misused by two very accomplished mages with devastating results. 

The characters are well-developed and the plot works well although it is perhaps overlong. The author writes well and the novel is engaging and enjoyable, even if fairly dark!

 

More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?