Malcolm X's searing memoir belongs on the small shelf of great autobiographies. The reasons are many: the blistering honesty with which he recounts his transformation from a bitter, self-destructive petty criminal into an articulate political activist, the continued relevance of his militant analysis of white racism, and his emphasis on self-respect and self-help for African Americans. And there's the vividness with which he depicts black popular culture--try as he might to criticize those lindy hops at Boston's Roseland dance hall from the perspective of his Muslim faith, he can't help but make them sound pretty wonderful. These are but a few examples. The Autobiography of Malcolm X limns an archetypal journey from ignorance and despair to knowledge and spiritual awakening. When Malcolm tells coauthor Alex Haley, "People don't realize how a man's whole life can be changed by one book," he voices the central belief underpinning every attempt to set down a personal story as an example for others. Although many believe his ethic was directly opposed to Martin Luther King Jr.'s during the civil rights struggle of the '60s, the two were not so different. Malcolm may have displayed a most un-Christian distaste for loving his enemies, but he understood with King that love of God and love of self are the necessary first steps on the road to freedom. --Wendy Smith
New York Times Book Review, Robert Boone
It behooves us to read, and even reread Malcolm's book, and especially the last five chapaters, which describe the transformation that took place in his mind and heart after his break with Elijah Muhammad and the Black Muslims.
From AudioFile
Joe Morton successfully captures the essence of Malcolm X by presenting the text straight from the hip. In the opening, he speaks bitterly about the murderous bigotry Malcolm experiences as a child. With a slick, fast-talking voice Morton portrays Malcolm's life as a young hustler then shifts his tone to one of powerful conviction when recounting Malcolm's conversion to the Black Muslim faith and his realization of his vocation. Roscoe Lee Browne's solemn, resonant narration connects Morton's dramatization to an objective chronicle of significant events in the leader's life and gently bridges the text. The result proves an intriguing program. M.P.T. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
The Autobiography of Malcolm X FROM OUR EDITORS
The absorbing personal story of the man who rose from a life of poverty and disadvantage to become the most dynamic leader of the Black Revolution, only to have his life cut short by an assassin's bullets.
ANNOTATION
This audio program tells of the man very few people really knew--and of his plans to move into the mainstream of the Civil Rights movement before an assassin ended his life. 3 cassettes.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
With its first great victory in the landmark Supreme Court decision, Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954, the Civil Rights movement gained the powerful momentum it needed to sweep forward into its crucial decade, the 1960s. As voices of protest and change rose above the din of history and false promises, one sounded more urgently, more passionately than the rest. Malcolm X - once called the most dangerous man in America - challenged the world to listen and learn the truth as he experienced it. And his enduring message is as relevant today as when he first delivered it. This is the first hardcover edition of this classic autobiography since it was originally published in 1964. In its searing pages, Malcolm X the Muslim leader, firebrand, and anti-integrationist, tells the extraordinary story of his life and the growth of the Black Muslim movement to veteran writer and journalist Alex Haley. In a unique collaboration, Alex Haley worked with Malcolm X for nearly two years, interviewing, listening to, and understanding the most controversial leader of his time. Raised in Lansing, Michigan, Malcolm Little's road to world fame was as astonishing as it was unpredictable. After drifting from childhood poverty to petty crime, Malcolm found himself in jail. It was there that he came into contact with the teachings of a little-known Black Muslim leader named Elijah Muhammed. The newly renamed Malcolm X devoted himself body and soul to the teachings of Elijah Muhammed and the world of Islam, and became the Nation's foremost spokesman. When his own conscience forced him to break with Elijah Muhammed, Malcolm founded the Organization of Afro-American Unity, to reach African Americans across the country with an inspiring message of pride, power, and self-determination. The Autobiography of Malcolm X defines American culture and the African-American struggle for social and economic equality that has now become a battle for survival. His fascinating perspective on the lies and
FROM THE CRITICS
Sacred Fire
The Autobiography of Malcolm X is the story of one of the
remarkable lives of the twentieth century. Malcolm X, as
presented in this as-told-to autobiography, is a figure of almost
mythic proportions; a man who sunk to the greatest depths of
depravity and rose to become a man whose life's mission was to
lead his people to freedom and strength. It provides a searing
depiction of the deeply rooted issues of race and class in America
and remains relevant and inspiring today. Malcolm X's story
would inspire Alex Haley to write Roots, a novel that would, in
turn, define the saga of a people.
Malcolm Little was born in Nebraska in 1925, the seventh
child of Reverend Earl Little, a Baptist minister, and Louise Little,
a mulatto born in Grenada to a black mother and a white father.
Malcolm X quickly grew to hate the society he'd grown up in.
After his father was killed, his mother was unfairly denied
insurance coverage and his family fell apart. Young Malcolm went
from a foster home to a reformatory, to shining shoes in the
speakeasies and dance halls of Boston. After getting work as a Pullman
porter, he went to New York and fell in love with Harlem. His
stint as a drug dealer and petty crook landed him in jail, where he
became a devout student of the Nation of Islam and Elijah
Muhammad. That was when he figured out that "he could beat
the white man better with his mind than he ever could with a
club." Malcolm X's subsequent quest for knowledge and equality
for blacks led to his unreserved commitment to the liberation of
blacks in American society.
What makes this book extraordinary is the honesty with which
Malcolm presents his life: Even as he regrets the mistakes he made
as a young man, he brings his zoot-suited, swing-dancing, conk-
haired Harlem youth to vivid life; even though he later turns
away from the Nation of Islam, the strong faith he at one time
in that sect's beliefs, a faith that redeemed him from prison
and a life of crime, comes through. What made the man so extraordinary
was his courageous insistence on finding the true path
to his personal salvation and to the salvation of the people he
loved, even when to stay on that path meant danger, alienation,
and death.
Robert Bone
A movement might emerge shorn of racism, seperatism, and blind hate which yet preserved the explosive force and liberating energy of the Muslim myth. This is the direction in which Malcolm X was moving for a year or more before his death. The essense of the this shift was psychological. It had nothing to do with black supremacy, but much to do with manhood and self-reliance. -- Books of the Century; New York Times review, September 1966
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
The most important book I'll ever read. It changed the way I felt; it changed the way I acted. It has given me courage that I didn't know I had inside me. I'm one of hundreds of thousands whose life has changed for the better. Spike Lee
This book will have a permanent place in the literature of the Afro-American struggle. I.F. Stone