Reviews

Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates

dizzyizzyy's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging emotional informative reflective sad fast-paced

5.0

tess98's review

Go to review page

challenging emotional hopeful informative inspiring reflective relaxing sad medium-paced

4.0

vmusing's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

“Never forget that we were enslaved in this country longer than we have been free.”

apathetic's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Eye opening and thought provoking.

dharris's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

This was a book that came across my radar, unexpectedly. I had never even heard of this book until it came across my radar. However, I'm very glad it did.

This book is raw, unfiltered, and true emotion. I feel it was passionately written from a father to a son, about what it was like and still is like, to be a black man in America. Even though I hate that this was the experience of the author, I know it's his truth, and probably many others too. This book had a way of making me feel uncomfortable, and really helped me to understand the privileges that have been granted to me, for nothing other than my skin color.

As someone who grew up with a rough background, the culture of growing up in a poor neighborhood didn't surprise me at all. Not as many differences between being poor as you may think (just my truth). What surprised me was that no matter how successful you become, or how much you remove yourself from that situation, the racism that has embedded itself into this country's founding, can still take down the most successful and affluent African American person. This is something foreign to white folks, and a key difference between poor white, and poor black. As stated in the book, " your only one act of racism away." I never thought when I was a young poor kid that there wasn't hope, because I knew if I worked hard and did well, I would be successful. The author goes to great links to vividly express that this isn't his experience, and I imagine this is true for many other minorities as well. This truth startled me, and should startle us all, but it truly has given me a better perspective. I can see why this is on the list for books every white person should read. I would highly recommend.

bjhenning's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

3.5

pascalibrary's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

His experience is one to learn from. Everyone can. I think his past as a poet is well reflected in his flowing, graceful style of prose. Ingrained in these words is a message that I am not the target audience of(the book was written for his son), yet one that I will still strive to remember.

gobriol's review

Go to review page

challenging inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.25

meg_teg's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Months later, I still struggle to word my feelings about this book. Such a raw, vulnerable, honest personal narrative. And as a letter to his son, the simultaneous poignancy and love interwoven in this retelling of life as a black man in urban America was as beautiful as it was sobering.

branson's review

Go to review page

4.0

Coates writes his messaging into such poetic, raw forms. He tells it in such a fundamental way that it feels as if I cannot help but bear witness to its truth. At the same time, I struggle to verbalize my own takeaways. Coates's message is both written right into the word, and burns at the edge of language. Maybe this is as poetry intends, though his story is written in prose.

His picture of racism in rooted in the way it affects the black body. He captures its terror and inescapability. He captures so much that attempts to hide in abstraction in concrete terms.

I hope to read Between the World and Me again. His words wedge in truths that simply sink in whether I have had the chance to process them or not.