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The White Peril

A Family Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the son of legendary civil rights organizer Robert P. Moses: a brilliant, unflinching memoir about becoming Black in America that interweaves voices from 3 generations of the Moses family
"Omo Moses has written an epic reaffirmation of Black diasporic life and a clarion call for justice. The White Peril is destined to be read and cherished.”
—Junot Díaz, Pulitzer Prize for Fiction recipient and author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

In The White Peril, Omo Moses deftly interweaves his own life story with excerpts from both his great-grandfather's sermons and the writings of his father, the civil rights activist Bob Moses. The result is a powerful chorus of voices that spans 3 generations of an African American family, all shining a light on the Black experience, all calling fiercely for racial justice.
Omo was born in 1972 in Tanzania, where his parents had fled to escape targeted harassment by the US government. He did not encounter white supremacy until the family moved back to America when he was 4. Here, he learned what it meant to be Black. He came of age in a Black enclave of Cambridge, Massachusetts, became a passionate basketball player, lived in the shadow of his father’s Civil Rights work but did not feel like a part of it until his college basketball career came to an unceremonious end. Unsure what to do next, he took up his father’s offer to go with him to Mississippi and teach math to Algebra Project students. Omo didn’t know it yet, but it was among those young people that he would find his purpose.
This book is at once a coming-of-age story, a multigenerational family memoir, an epic father-son road trip, a searing account of the Black male experience, and a work that powerfully revives Rev. Moses’s demand for liberation.
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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2024

      Moses, founder and CEO of MathTalk and son of civil rights organizer Robert P. Moses, writes about three generations of his family--his own, his great-grandfather's, and his father's--using his father's writings and his great-grandfather's sermons to explicate the Black experience and call for racial justice. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 25, 2024
      In his searing adult debut, picture book author Moses (Sometimes We Do) shares how the teachings of his father, civil rights leader Bob Moses, and great-grandfather, radical Baptist preacher William Henry Moses, shaped his political consciousness. The author begins after his family moved from Tanzania to the U.S. in 1976, which exposed Moses to racism from his peers and the local police in Cambridge, Mass. After college, Moses’s priorities shifted from basketball to education, inspired by his father, who launched a national math literacy initiative called the Algebra Project when Moses was in middle school. As Moses narrates his growing interest in teaching Black students via the Algebra Project in order to “deliver to the other side of America’s cages,” he shuffles in excerpts from his father’s writings, and paints a detailed portrait of his great-grandfather, who used money he earned as an overseer on a Virginia plantation to become a nationally recognized religious leader who published fiery writings on race relations. Moses nimbly orchestrates the interplay between his and his ancestors’ voices, bringing the book to a moving conclusion that looks forward to what his own son might accomplish. The result is a stirring blend of family history and coming-of-age narrative.

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  • English

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