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A Promised Land

4/5. First volume of memoir. I thought it would be interesting to read this right after Coates's essays spanning the administration, and I was right. They have different conceptions of race in America; Coates addresses this difference directly when he talks about how disconcerted many of his admirers are when they ask how to solve racial injustice and he says he's not sure it's possible. Obama, by contrast, definitely believes it's possible. This is pretty surprising considering a recurrent theme of this volume is his slowly-growing understanding of the movements that arose after his election, in response to his assumption of power. You'd think, even if only from the vantage of hindsight, this would change his fundamental belief in [fill in a lot of shlocky stuff here about how we're all the same underneath it all]. But it didn't. Or he knows he can't say so. I guess I respect that? Sort of? … Sort of.

Anyway, needless to say it's a great book, and worth reading for a lot of personal insight (and excellent Michelle anecdotes). And parts are absolutely riveting, like the closing section on the bin Laden raid. I found the international politics sections in general to be well worth this hefty book (and expensive! Wow!), as he has a clarity of analysis that is unusual. This book does elide some things, as you might expect – there's a notable absence, among all the charming descriptions of close staff and advisors, of a particular senior individual who it later transpired, and I have bitter personal experience to attest, is a liar and a fraud, and I find it impossible to believe he was anything else in 2009. But in general this book is candid and direct, even about uncomfortable things.

Also, just. What a mind. What a gift he was.
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Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance

3/5. I hadn't read this in nearly twenty years, and thought it was time. And that's . . . interesting? Like, this is a book all about growing up as a mixed race kid, and finding and losing different kinds of racial identities, and working as a field organizer in poor black Chicago communities, and going to Africa for the first time. (And also in passing about the drugs he did in high school, LOL. Kid was not planning on running for President with this out there, you guys). It's an extremely personal story of race – that's the entire project. It's about the two sides of his family, and his many half siblings, and the accommodations with themselves and the world they all come to, in different ways. But it is not, even in the chapters about community organizing, a book about institutionalized racism. It's about the extremely personal experience of a thing we're just . . . kind of not talking about. That rings true for a man who would later be dragged hard by segments of the black community for his repeated insistence that all sorts of problems from crime to poverty should be solved in the black family rather than, say, through policy.

But yeah. Good to revisit. I remember how much this book was talked up before his senate run, back when only serious politics nerds knew who the hell he even was. It was revelatory to a lot of people then, many of whom – including me – had never read a book by a black man like this one, about these things. I've read many more since, and this is still a pretty good one.

And also, not for nothing, he was and is a strong, confident writer and, oh yeah, smart as hell. Remember that? It's good to remember.

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