Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Cuz: The Life and Times of Michael A.
Cuz: The Life and Times of Michael A. | Danielle Allen
7 posts | 4 read | 6 to read
So tender yet courageous is this fierce family memoir that it makes mass incarceration nothing less than a new American tragedy. In a shattering work that shifts between a womans private anguish over the loss of her beloved baby cousin and a scholars fierce critique of the American prison system, Danielle Allen seeks answers to what, for many years, felt unanswerable. Why? Why did her cousin, a precocious young man who dreamed of being a firefighter and a writer, end up dead? Why did he languish in prison? And why, at the age of fifteen, was he in an alley in South Central Los Angeles, holding a gun while trying to steal someones car? Cuz means both cousin and because. In this searing memoir, Allen unfurls a "new American story" about a world tragically transformed by the sudden availability of narcotics and the rise of street gangsa collision, followed by a reactionary War on Drugs, that would devastate not only South Central L.A. but virtually every urban center in the nation. At thirteen, sensitive, talkative Michael Allen was suddenly tossed into this cauldron, a violent world where he would be tried at fifteen as an adult for an attempted carjacking, and where he would be sent, along with an entire generation, cascading into the spiral of the Los Angeles prison system. Throughout her cousin Michaels eleven years in prison, Danielle Allenwho became a dean at the University of Chicago at the age of thirty-tworemained psychically bonded to her self-appointed charge, visiting Michael in prison and corresponding with him regularly. When she finally welcomed her baby cousin home, she adopted the role of "cousin on duty," devotedly supporting Michaels fresh start while juggling the demands of her own academic career. As Cuz heartbreakingly reveals, even Allens devotion, as unwavering as it was, could not save Michael from the brutal realities encountered by newly released young men navigating the streets of South Central. The corrosive entanglements of gang warfare, combined with a star-crossed love for a gorgeous woman driving a gold Mercedes, would ultimately be Michaels undoing. In this Ellisonian story of a young African American mans coming-of-age in late twentieth-century America, and of the family who will always love Michael, we learn how we lost an entire generation.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
TeeCee
post image
Pickpick

Well, it‘s a nonfiction heartbreaker about a(nother) promising young kid lost to the streets, penal system, and violence - a kid our society has failed. Hard to read but important. The author, an accomplished academic, gets a little too “academic” in parts, but a good read overall.

blurb
MsLeah8417
post image

Just heard about this book tonight and was shook by simply reading the synopsis. I immediately added it to my TBR pile for Summer 2018.

14 likes1 stack add
review
moarbookspleaze
post image
Pickpick

Book 22 of 2018

blurb
moarbookspleaze
post image
32 likes1 stack add
blurb
BellaBookNook
post image

Waiting for my son to get his braces off so I‘m doing a little reading. Very interesting story.

13 likes2 stack adds
blurb
Christy2318
post image

I sat at the back of the tent so I could listen to part of panel about Race, Crime & Law in Black America before I had to go to catch another panel. Dr. Allen who teaches at Harvard wrote this book about her cousin after Henry Louis Gates told her she was going to have to give some lectures on the topic. #texasbookfestival

42 likes2 stack adds
blurb
Graciouswarriorprincess
post image

I love coming home to #bookmail!