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The Autobiography of Malcolm X (Penguin Modern Classics) Reviews

Posted by Aaron on August 10, 2012 in Other Non-Fiction |

The Autobiography of Malcolm X (Penguin Modern Classics)

From hustling, drug addiction and armed violence in America's black ghettos Malcolm X turned, in a dramatic prison conversion, to the puritanical fervour of the Black Muslims. As their spokesman he became identified in the white press as a terrifying teacher of race hatred; but to his direct audience, the oppressed American blacks, he brought hope and self-respect. This autobiography (written with Alex Haley) reveals his quick-witted integrity, usually obscured by batteries of frenzied headlines, and the fierce idealism which led him to reject both liberal hypocrisies and black racialism.

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3 Comments

  • Mark Levine "leevyne" says:
    11 of 14 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Two Authors, July 2, 2010
    By 
    Mark Levine “leevyne” (Jersey City, NJ USA) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: The Autobiography of Malcolm X (Penguin Modern Classics) (Paperback)

    Like many in my generation I was deeply affected by this book and by Malcolm’s words, oral and written. But decades of continued related reading heve left me wondering just which of those in this “Autobiography” are, indeed, Malcolm’s. Amazon’s way of listing editors reinforces the irony that this book really has two authors, one of whom (Alex Haley) had a less-than-militant history and a less-than-sterling reputation for accuracy. This book has, since its publication, been regarded as the “real” Malcolm, which has been perpetuated in film and in the conventional wisdom, scholarly and street. I am not saying it is inaccurate, only that it might be time for a serious scholar to examine with greater scrutiny the man’s life and particularly its final months. There has not been a definitive biography for a man who unquestionably deserves one.

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  • John McConnell says:
    2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    And the darkness comprehended it not, May 25, 2011
    By 
    John McConnell (Boston, MA) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: The Autobiography of Malcolm X (Penguin Modern Classics) (Paperback)

    When Malcolm X was a boy, he endured his father’s murder by, and his mother losing her sanity from, racist sanctimonious Southern whites. Unsurprisingly, he spent his later life in a quest to resolve the psychological tension of those horrific events. One might say that, by the end of his quest, he had found the Grail.

    Malcolm X was largely overshadowed by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. – at least as I remember it – during the Civil Rights Era of the 1960s. Unsurprisingly, Malcolm X began veering more toward the universality of King as he matured. For indeed universality is the central Christian message – (Jesus having spent his entire ministry as “an unclean rabbi walking through social taboos like they were cobwebs”) – and the central message of Islam, also.

    Malcolm X’s diagnosis of what’s wrong with US culture seems to run thus:

    1. The Founding Fathers declared “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness”. But the reality was that to create the nation the Fathers were forced to permit slavery to survive. Noble ideals notwithstanding, the nation was launched amid institutional hypocrisy.

    2. Despite his oath to support and defend the Constitution (and despite President Washington’s encouragement to bring native Americans into American society as equals with whites), President Andrew Jackson refused to comply with Chief Justice John Marshall’s majority decision in Worcester v. Georgia (1832) that native Americans be treated as equals with European Americans. Noble ideals notwithstanding, the nation was confirmed in institutional hypocrisy.

    I found it odd that never once does Malcolm X mention the Islamic slave trade in Africa, a black diaspora that began roughly seven centuries before the European-Atlantic slave trade, (see Islam’s Black Slaves: The Other Black Diaspora). Slavery was not made illegal on the Arabian Peninsula until 1962 – shortly before Malcolm X’s arrival there.

    While I took issue with X’s incessant characterization of Caucasians as “devils”, I correctly anticipated while reading that as his autobiography progressed he would mature past the blinders of racism. As an Irish American friend of mine remarked, if he had been born black in this country he would’ve been a lot angrier than Malcolm X, “the angriest black man in America”.

    Frankly, I liked Malcolm X reading this book. I liked him not because his judgment was always sound (it wasn’t) nor because his heart was always full of love (it wasn’t) but simply because he spoke truth to power and because he was *trying* to do the right thing. Thomas Carlyle’s definition of the hero is that “the hero is sincere”. By this definition, Malcolm X was heroic, and heroic stories are inspiring.

    It is curious to read the printed fire of Malcolm X’s words and contrast them with the cool spoken presentations he was quite capable of delivering.

    I consider this book essential reading for any American who wants better to understand himself and his culture.

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  • Miss Xeshu says:
    15 of 21 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    I am not worthy, June 10, 2006
    By 
    Miss Xeshu (London, England) –

    This review is from: The Autobiography of Malcolm X (Penguin Modern Classics) (Paperback)

    I must say I feel rather humble in my attempt to review this autobiography, hence the brevity of my Review. However I cannot sufficiently stress how the account of Malcolm X’s life has given me as a native African (and gives the reader regardless of ethnic background) a crucially important Sociological, Philosophical, Political, Islamic and Pan African insight into African American culture and its’ shaping in historical context.

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