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#senegal
review
Caterina
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Pickpick

Listened to this #audiobook while playing PowerWash Simulator (#audiogaming ?) which feels like some of my other favorite activities - #audiopuzzling & #audiostitching.

Ta-Nehisi Coates reads wonderfully, and his writing works well in audio format. From Senegal to South Carolina to Palestine, he writes powerfully about race, myths, and the stories we tell ourselves. I appreciate how willing he was to be self-critical and show how he's changed.

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Awk_Word_Smith
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Pickpick

Reading Ta-Nehisi Coates‘s The Message was both a humbling and galvanizing experience. Coates‘s journey—spanning Senegal, South Carolina, and Palestine—compels readers to confront the stories we inherit and the myths we perpetuate, particularly those that uphold white supremacy and obscure the realities of marginalized people. I‘ll be buying a physical copy and referencing it for years to come on how to craft stories—fiction and nonfiction alike.

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Awk_Word_Smith
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Getting my nonfiction itch scratched by the incomparable Ta-Nehisi Coates.

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staci.reads
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Pickpick

Coates is never an easy read, but he is worth the time. He forces me to slow down and read each word. I found the last part of the 3-part book especially eye-opening as he recounts his time in Palestine and draws parallels to colonization across time and specifically to our own storied history of oppression.

80 likes2 stack adds
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Enchanted_Bibliophile
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Mehso-so

A friend suggested I read Between the World and Me, but it wasn't available, so I thought I'd get the next best thing.

I really enjoyed the first half of the book, It was thought-provoking and I found it very interesting, even learning a thing or two.
The second half I found a bit boring and laborers to get though. I'm not denying the importance of the subject matter, it was just that I didn't really feel a connection to it.

44 likes1 stack add2 comments
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ncsufoxes
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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“Oppressive power is preserved in the smoke and fog and sometimes it is smuggled in the unexamined shadows of the language of the oppressed themselves.” Ta-Nehisi Coates The Message If books weren‘t political they wouldn‘t be trying so hard to ban them. Especially books that challenge the norm & the “correct” narrative.

dabbe 🎯🎯🎯 4mo
kspenmoll Yes! 🎯 4mo
DogMomIrene True! 💯 4mo
AmyG Yep! 4mo
30 likes4 comments
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Sharpeipup
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Galentine‘s Day gift that includes the Barbie movie and I just happen to be reading tagged book…love when my reads coincide with real life!

KadaGul What a cute Galentine‘s Day Present 🎁!! #HAPPYGALENTINESDAY 4mo
39 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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Scochrane26
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Pickpick

I always learn so much when I read or listen to a Coates book. I listened to this one, mostly because I love his voice. This one is about his first trip to Senegal, a visit to South Carolina to defend his book from being banned, & his experience in Palestine & Israel. The last one was the longest, & I feel I learned the most from that one. I think Coates is a wise person who is always trying to grow & learn more.

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Shmemilina
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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“And through words I understood that my Baltimore was not damned, that what I saw in the eyes of the boys there, what I heard in the music, was in fact something old, something ineffable, which marked all of humanity, stretching from Stratford upon Avon to the Streets.”

LoverOfLearning On my to read list! I have The Water Dancer on my list of 40 to read this year. 4mo
13 likes1 stack add1 comment
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DGRachel
The Message | Ta-Nehisi Coates
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Pickpick

I don‘t think I can add anything to what has already been said about this collection of brief essays on writing, racism, reparations, and apartheid. It is short and powerful. I knew some of the history, but not all of it. I appreciated the push to read books by oppressed people, not their allies or their oppressors. I loved that he was honest about his perspective and opinion changes in the face of new/more information.

DGRachel Too many people double down. Coates honestly confesses how he espoused an opinion in an earlier work, had new life experiences that opened his eyes, and now feels and thinks differently. No defense. No doubling down. Just, I was wrong, I‘m sorry for and ashamed of how I thought before, but I know better now. Bravo. 5mo
Suet624 Great review! 5mo
Caterina That's something I loved about this book too! He models how we can all change and grow without defensiveness or doubling down. 2d
52 likes3 comments