Signet, 215 pp., $1.75 (paper)
For years Ned O'Gorman, a white man, a poet, an essayist, has been working with Harlem's young black children in a storefront nursery and children's library he founded. He has already written two books about the nursery: The Wilderness and the Laurel Tree and The Storefront. This latest book, with its grim, admonitory title, is not meant to describe the further educational observations of an especially dedicated and honorable man. He is at this point in his life desperate, sad, enraged. He believes that isolated efforts such as his mean little in a world he comes close to writing off as a living hell, populated by an American lumpenproletariat:
Review, 2548 words
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