Make Believe

! Read * Make Believe by Diane Athill ✓ eBook or Kindle ePUB. Make Believe Despite a desperately troubled youth, he became an eloquent spokesman for the black underclass, was Jean Sebergs lover and published a book about Malcolm X, before descending into a mania that had him believing he was God. In Make Believe, Diana Athill, acclaimed author of Instead of a Letter and Stet, remembers her turbulent friendship with Hakim Jamal, a young black convert to the teachings of Malcolm X, whom she met in London in the late 1960s. A witness to his struggles

Make Believe

Author :
Rating : 4.45 (794 Votes)
Asin : 1847086322
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 160 Pages
Publish Date : 2013-12-02
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

Despite a desperately troubled youth, he became an eloquent spokesman for the black underclass, was Jean Seberg's lover and published a book about Malcolm X, before descending into a mania that had him believing he was God. In Make Believe, Diana Athill, acclaimed author of Instead of a Letter and Stet, remembers her turbulent friendship with Hakim Jamal, a young black convert to the teachings of Malcolm X, whom she met in London in the late 1960s. A witness to his struggles, Diana Athill writes with her characteristic honesty about her entanglement with Jamal, Jamal's relationship with the daughter of a Brit

Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. But the author tells too little of herself to make the memoir memorable. With cool economy, she recalls how her relationship with Jamal, 14 years her junior, intensified from editing his autobiography to friendship to sex; she tells of his strange relationship with Jean Seberg and of his abusive, guru-like friendship with the daughter of a one-time member of Parliament, who so embraced his teachings about white guilt that "she wanted to turn herself black." But Athill overlooked indications of Jamal's madness--he described himself as God--until they were inescapable. From Publishers Weekly Occasionally compelling, this brief book recounts a lost episode from the "radical chic" era, British division. . In 1969, Athill ( Instead of a Letter ), a well-bred, 50-ish London editor, met Hakim Jamal, an African American risen from drugs and drink through the t

"Disappointing" according to Timothy E. Green. We are told that the subject is interesting, but he doesn't come to life. Anthill is usually amazing, but she falls flat here.

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