ABSTRACT

This is the second volume in the First of the Year Series. Contributors like Armond White, Philip Levine, Donna Gaines, Lawrence Goodwyn, Irving Louis Horowitz, Charles O'Brien, Fredric Smoler, Paul Berman, and Amiri Baraka are back (and blazing). And there are important new voices in the First mix, such as Vincent Harding, Roxane Johnson, and Bob Levin. If there is a leitmotif to this edition, it is the election and inauguration of Barack Obama as the first African-American president. First aims to be up to the minute of this moment.As Benj DeMott notes "a glance at this volume confirms the margin is still the center for us." And that margin stretches from Harlem to the world. There are tales of edgy sojourns in Afghanistan, Thailand, and South Africa. The volume also has a Question & Answer with Ousmane Sembi, who taught Africans to resist "elements of received culture-those fixed rules and values which nobody but those on the margins dare to question." A second interview with Adam Hochschild celebrates the Englishman who invented abolition, and an African-American original who coined the phrase "crimes against humanity."The volume includes a protest against the Israeli war machine by Uri Avnery who has long been a creative outsider in his own society. It makes the case that American ideologues (on both extremes) keep getting the Middle East wrong because they cannot grasp the complexities of any country, including their own. First of the Year's minority angles of vision will help readers see with new eyes. It will help their hearing too. The volume has plenty of music writing marked by loving attention to details of pop performances. In short, this collection reflects its editor; direct, unafraid, urban, and entirely contemporary.

part 1|13 pages

Home Is Where We Start

chapter |3 pages

Winter Light

chapter |1 pages

The Prose of the World

chapter |3 pages

Manilow or Monk

chapter |3 pages

Showing Out

chapter |4 pages

“Something About Compassion”

chapter |5 pages

Between Two Smiles

chapter |5 pages

The Boss Has Gone Mad

chapter |2 pages

Rational Exuberance

chapter |4 pages

Two Nations

chapter |5 pages

Everyday People in Never-Never Land

chapter |1 pages

Touch Me

chapter |1 pages

The Lovers

chapter |2 pages

Makeba in Memoriam

chapter |2 pages

R. Kelly’s Political Gift

chapter |5 pages

Springsteen’s Magic Realism

chapter |5 pages

The Uses of James Baldwin

chapter |9 pages

Radical History Channel

chapter |5 pages

I Had a Dream

chapter |6 pages

Tight Connection

part 2|1 pages

First Draft of History II

chapter |1 pages

You Got ta Move

chapter |5 pages

Warm Regards & Power Chords

chapter |1 pages

My February Epiphany

chapter |4 pages

Cross the Border, Close the Gap

chapter |2 pages

Stuff White People Like

chapter |1 pages

Orpheus Descending

chapter |1 pages

School’s Out for the G.O.P.

chapter |1 pages

Feelings

chapter |2 pages

American Junkies

chapter |1 pages

American Socialism 2.0

chapter |3 pages

If Buddy Met Poppy

chapter |1 pages

Apocalypse Wow!

chapter |1 pages

Reality Check

chapter |1 pages

America Alcoholica

chapter |1 pages

Presidential Hair

chapter |2 pages

Calvin and The Rapture

chapter |1 pages

Living Sober

chapter |8 pages

We Are Already In The Future!

chapter |10 pages

The Ground We Stand On

part 3|1 pages

Guided Trips

chapter |11 pages

At Ease in Azania

chapter |2 pages

South to a Very Old Place

chapter |19 pages

A House of Books

chapter |37 pages

The Uses of Benjamin DeMott

chapter |6 pages

Against The Current

chapter |5 pages

To Criticize the Critic

chapter |1 pages

How I Became a Writer (Pt. 1)

chapter |1 pages

Shadow Boxing

chapter |5 pages

Kandahar 1971

chapter |4 pages

Hem, Maugham and Me

chapter |4 pages

David’s Choice

chapter |20 pages

Pariah-Time

chapter |8 pages

Genius—Not!

chapter |3 pages

Midwiving a New America

part 4|6 pages

Last Call & Response

chapter |3 pages

Where Hope Ends

chapter |2 pages

Witness