The Last Negroes at Harvard: The Class of 1963 and the 18 Juvenile Men Who Changed Harvard Forever

Date:

Garrett’s memoir offers an instructive peek at a Harvard that has been transformed … One hopes that the intellectual environment of Harvard today is more fascinating than the one that hardly makes an appearance in Garrett’s memoir. He discusses no class that left an impression him, no book to which he was introduced, no idea that grabbed him, no teacher with whom he was enthralled. He describes excitedly a dinner that he and some classmates shared with Malcolm X. He says that on account of that meeting, ‘something shifted inside my juvenile mind and soul.’ Perhaps so. But I would more confidently credit the claim if it was substantiated by some contemporaneous evidence … What many would see as a remarkable stroke of good fortune is eclipsed in Garrett’s telling by the recrudescence of fears and frustrations that he had briefly consigned to the past.

Read Full Review >>

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

Lit From the Chocolate City: Ten Washington D.C Books That Aren’t About Politicians

Imagine a story—a novel or a movie—set in Washington,...

Truth and Reconciliation: Ten Books That Explore South Africa’s Identity

In 1996, I lived in South Africa and bore...

Finding Africa in Harlem: Displacement and Belonging in Claude McKay’s Home to Harlem

One of the most striking things about Home to...