A Gathering of Heroes: Reflections on Rage and Responsibility - Memoir of the Los Angeles Riots

Author:   Gregory Alan Williams
Publisher:   Academy Chicago Publishers
ISBN:  

9780897334044


Pages:   205
Publication Date:   30 August 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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A Gathering of Heroes: Reflections on Rage and Responsibility - Memoir of the Los Angeles Riots


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Author:   Gregory Alan Williams
Publisher:   Academy Chicago Publishers
Imprint:   Academy Chicago Publishers
Dimensions:   Width: 13.90cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 18.00cm
Weight:   0.330kg
ISBN:  

9780897334044


ISBN 10:   0897334043
Pages:   205
Publication Date:   30 August 2005
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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. .. a magnificent, warm tale of compassion and humanity. It will help readers overcome obstacles based on prejudice and violence. -- Elie Wiesel


... a magnificent, warm tale of compassion and humanity. It will help readers overcome obstacles based on prejudice and violence. -- Elie Wiesel


The media called them Good Samaritans, those brave souls who rescued drivers trapped at the Florence and Normandie intersection - ground zero of the '92 L.A. riots. Alan-Williams, an African-American actor, was one of them. Here, his short but impassioned report dovetails his role at the intersection with reflections on black rage, mob violence, individual responsibility, and the dangers of stereotyping. Alan-Williams hears the Rodney King beating verdict on his car radio. After his aerobics class, he drives purposefully to the already notorious intersection, his large hope being to save the victims from their aggressors and the aggressors from themselves. The actor was no saint. He had been badly bruised by racism during his Iowa childhood and understood the self-destructive rage that ensues, but he had also - as an aspiring Marine eager to show he was one of the fellas - participated in a despicable group attack on a fellow-recruit. At the intersection, he plunges into the mob to rescue an Asian truck-driver, beaten to a pulp. He drags him away, drawing for support on the gathering of heroes inside his head, those who had taught him compassion (like the Mayan woman in Mexico caring for her disfigured child) and those who had taught him steadfastness (his Marine drill instructors). Perception is everything. Where Alan-Williams sees in the driver his battered childhood self, a furious teenager sees a justly punished Korean motherfucker. (The victim is, in fact, Japanese-American.) Minutes later, an LAPD squad car approaches the blood-soaked Samaritan and his charge, sees human refuse, and speeds away. But there is a happy ending. Overcoming his prejudice, Alan-Williams entrusts Takao Hirata to a brother wearing a shoulder-length doo rag, who delivers him safely to the hospital. A moving illumination of the meaning of brotherhood. It deserves to sell and sell and sell. (Kirkus Reviews)


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