Princess of the Hither Isles by Adele Logan Alexander

Staff Pick

Author of Ambiguous Lives and Homelands and Waterways, Adele Logan Alexander taught for eighteen years at George Washington University. Princess of the Hither Isles (Yale, $30) draws on her extensive scholarship as well as on her own family history to tell the story of Adella Hunt Logan (1863-1915), a pioneering activist for social justice—and Alexander’s grandmother. Born to a white father and free woman of color in a Georgia family whose lineage also included Cherokees, Logan started teaching at age sixteen, before getting a scholarship to Atlanta University; by 1883, she was
on the faculty of the Tuskegee Institute, where she became the institution’s first woman librarian and formed a close friendship with Booker T. Washington. An advocate for equal education and universal suffrage, she wrote for The Crisis and The Colored American and was part of a circle of reformers that included Susan B. Anthony, Frederick Douglass, and W. E. B. Du Bois. While her efforts ultimately led to the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, Logan suffered a breakdown and, just after Washington’s death in 1915, committed suicide. Alexander recounts her life with vivid historical insight and keen psychological acuity, doing justice to one of the many courageous women of color too often omitted from accounts of the suffrage movement.

Princess of the Hither Isles: A Black Suffragist’s Story from the Jim Crow South By Adele Logan Alexander Cover Image
$28.00
ISBN: 9780300242607
Availability: Special Order—Subject to Availability
Published: Yale University Press - September 24th, 2019

All the Powers of Earth by Sidney Blumenthal

Staff Pick

Sidney Blumenthal, a veteran journalist and former high-level government advisor, has been making impressive progress writing a monumental series on the life of Abraham Lincoln. Volume one, A Self- Made Man, appeared just three years ago and dealt with the first forty years of Lincoln’s life, through his start as a lawyer, deepening interest in politics, growing confidence and skill as a public speaker, marriage to Mary Todd, a stint in the House of Representatives, and return to Springfield in 1849 to practice law. The second volume, Wrestling with His Angel, came out just a year later and focused on the period between 1849 and 1856, a sort of wilderness period for Lincoln after his fi rst exposure to national politics. Now in All the Powers of Earth: The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. III 1856-1860 (Simon & Schuster, $35), Blumenthal chronicles Lincoln’s political ascent, culminating in his election to the presidency. This was an extraordinarily tumultuous time in U.S. history, and Blumenthal explores extensively a number of seminal events surrounding Lincoln as he re-enters the political spotlight.

All the Powers of Earth: The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln Vol. III, 1856-1860 By Sidney Blumenthal Cover Image
$35.00
ISBN: 9781476777283
Availability: Special Order—Subject to Availability
Published: Simon & Schuster - September 3rd, 2019

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee by David Treuer

Staff Pick

David Treuer’s revelatory history, The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee (Riverhead, $17) tells much more than the story of “Native America from 1890 to the present.” To understand 1890—the date of the massacre of 150 Lakota Sioux at Wounded Knee, which seemed to be the final nail in the coffin of America’s indigenous peoples—we have to know the innumerable ways the U.S. had already tried to deal with its “Indian problem,” how Europeans had treated the Natives from first contact, and what life was like on the continent during the centuries before it was “discovered” by whites. Treuer covers this complicated history in detail; if the number of treaties, acts, and battles is dizzying, what comes through clearly is that there is no single “Indian” story. Each tribe—and often each clan within the tribe—occupies distinct cultural and geographical landscapes, and each has been impacted differently by the various means whites have used to try to control them. These stories are fascinating and long overdue—without them, the story of America, and especially of the West, has been both partial and seriously impoverished. Treuer’s central thesis, however, is that despite whites’ relentless battle to exterminate Natives, they failed. Wounded Knee was not the end of the story, just one chapter in an ongoing saga.

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America from 1890 to the Present By David Treuer Cover Image
$18.00
ISBN: 9780399573194
Availability: In Stock—Click for Locations
Published: Riverhead Books - November 5th, 2019

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