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Showing posts with label top urban authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label top urban authors. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2011

One Hundred Miles and Running Free on Kindle New Year's Day





To celebrate the New Year, we are running a promotion for a free download of One Hundred Miles and Running by Q.B. Wells for the Amazon Kindle. If you do not have a Kindle, download the application on your computer, Ipad or smartphone.  The promotion will end at midnight. 

Get the follow up to Blackface: A Novel today. A link to the page is below.

One Hundred Miles and Running download

 Remember to leave a book review for the book on Amazon.

Note: If you are a member of Amazon Prime, download the book with no due dates! Get your copy of One Hundred Miles and Running (Blackface 2) on your Kindle App or device today.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Response to Sean Delonas Cartoon



The Sam Stein response to the Sean Delonas cartoon in the New York was fair and balanced. However, the ideas that can be inferred from the perspective of an African American are unique.

The reference to the stimulus package was narrow. The history of the monkey and the comparison to African Americans by other races is wide, layered and politically charged. Not literal politics in elections, but the practical, figurative politics that is played in peoples private lives.

Calling African Americans monkeys and niggers is not a practice that takes place in public. It takes place in the homes and informal meetings of individuals who believe the idea of racism has credence. The New York Post cartoon spoke to these people. They will all laughed behind closed doors. But they are too coward to stand behind their ideas.

African Americans are not monolithic in thinking. However, the inference in the illustration suggest that the President Obama should be killed for signing the stimulus bill.

The above cartoon spoof illustrates the larger conversation about racism that the Sean Delonas and the New York Post will not participate in or stand behind. Instead, the New York Post blamed Rev. Al Sharpton for being a publicity opportunist. The latter may be true. However, the Rev. Al Sharpton has taken the correct stance on this issue.

There is room for an individual to hide behind their art, images, and cartoons. They should just have to explain words behind them.

If the point was to incite. Then the cartoonist did his job.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Sideline Ho by C.J. Domino



For the past few months I've written a few book reviews for The Urban Book Source. Read the review of Sideline Ho and comment. I'd recommend the book for chick literature lovers but not for street lit readers. Find out more information on C.J. Domino.

If you would like to submit books for review to www.UrbaniaMag.com or the print edition. Send the books to Art Official Media LLC.

If you are a writer and would like to do author interviews, artists interviews, or feature articles for www.UrbaniaMag.com, contact me.

Look over the The Urban Boook Source and leave comments about the site.

I'll post some opinions on effective marketing sites for urban books next post.