No doubt Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. had a dream of racial harmony, racial unity, and bringing blacks and whites closer together. In chapter one, “We Still Angry,” readers will see which of today’s civil rights leaders said, “Get ready, George Washington, there’s a new neighbor on the Potomac. Get ready Mr. Jefferson, there’s a new neighbor on the Potomac. Get ready Mr. Lincoln, there’s a new neighbor, and we (blacks) are all coming to help him move in. We brought our luggage, we brought our food. Guess who’s coming to dinner?”
Those divisive words were spoken at a dedication ceremony for the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. monument on August 28, 2011. That cup should have been emptied decades ago, but today’s black African American leaders and spokespeople are diligent in efforts to keep it overflowing.
220 pages in length, Black Americans In The 21st Century: Integrating Or Segregating is being aggressively promoted to appropriate markets with a focus on the social sciences and African-American ethnic studies category. With U.S. wholesale distribution through Ingram and Baker Taylor, and pervasive online availability through Amazon, Barnes Noble and elsewhere, Black Americans In The 21st Century meets consumer demand through both retail and library markets with a suggested retail price of $19.95.
Additionally, Black Americans In The 21st Century can be ordered by retailers or wholesalers for the maximum trade discount price set by the author in quantities of ten or more from the Outskirts Press Direct bookstore at www.outskirtspress.com/bookstore.
ISBN: 9780966942521 Format: 5.5 x 8.5 paperback cream SRP: $19.95
For more information or to contact the author, visit www.outskirtspress.com/blackamericansinthe21stcentury.
About the author:
Doug Saint Carter, born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, is the first born son of W. G. Ellsworth, Jr. and Hope Ellsworth. The family moved to Jacksonville, Florida, when Doug was nine years old. He graduated from Englewood High School and attended Jones College where he studied broadcast management, which led to a twenty five year career in radio and some television as an on air personality and management responsibilities. In 1998 he publi
The book, Black Americans In The 21st Century, looks timely and interesting.Thanks for the recommendation.