Malcolm X:
Make It Plain
(Click Title or book to order on-line)
Oral Histories selected and edited by Cheryll Y. Greene
Text: William Strickland, Malcolm X
Publisher: Viking Penguin
Published: 1994
Format: Trade Cloth
From Blackside, Inc., the award-winning production team that created the national bestseller Eyes on the Prize comes the first major photographic biography of one of this century's most provocative thinkers. Tie-in to the PBS "American Experience" documentary (January 26, 1994). This book traces Malcolm X's "rise to fame, his world travels, and his life within the Nation of Islam through the words of family members, friends,and colleagues."
The voice of Malcolm X, silenced so abruptly nearly three
decades ago, speaks to more people today than ever before. His autobiography sells more
than 150,000 copies a year, his writings are devoured by thousands born after he died. But
who was he? Drawing on hundreds of sources, the PBS "American Experience"
documentary of his life, Malcolm X: Make It Plain, explores his many-faceted character -
political philosopher and visionary, husband and father, dynamic orator and hero - and the
many forces that forged him. In this, the companion volume to the documentary, rare
photographs and personal memories interweave to tell the compelling story of Malcolm's
youth on the streets of Boston and New York, his world travels, his life within the Nation
of Islam, his assassination in 1965. An essay by the acclaimed writer William Strickland
highlights the African-American urban experience mirrored by Malcolm, and how we are still
living through the history he helped shape.