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James Baldwin at 100: in praise of a writer who speaks to our times

Plus, tributes to Edna O’Brien, the Booker longlist, and Elif Shafak recommends a history of ‘ordinary’ women

Lucy Knight Lucy Knight
 

In a week of literary highs and lows, we paid tribute to the great Irish novelist Edna O’Brien, who died aged 93, and covered a Booker longlist that our chief books writer Lisa Allardice thinks might be the most enjoyable of recent years.

Friday also marked the centenary of the writer and civil rights activist James Baldwin: more on that after this week’s highlights. And scroll down for reading picks by the British-Turkish novelist Elif Shafak, who was interviewed by Claire Armitstead for the Saturday magazine.

James Baldwin: ‘for the sake of humankind’

James Baldwin speaks after taking part in the civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery in March 1965.
camera James Baldwin speaks after taking part in the civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery in March 1965. Photograph: Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

One hundred years ago, on 2 August, the man who would go on to be one of America’s most important writers and civil rights activists was born in Harlem hospital in New York. In this landmark year, tributes have included everything from reissues of the author’s work to Baldwin-themed jazz concerts.

Tom Jenks, author of a new book about Baldwin’s short story Sonny’s Blues, thinks the author’s enduring appeal is “because of the depth of his understanding, his sympathy, and the lyric perfection of his art”. He “possessed a totality of gifts, as a writer and a man, and he bestowed his gifts – not least of all his love – for the sake of humankind,” Jenks writes.

“I think Baldwin is the essential voice when it comes to history and the struggles we’re having around history at the moment,” historian David Olusoga told the Hay festival audience during an event celebrating this centenary year in May (and still available to watch online via the festival’s Hay Festival Anytime feature). “What Baldwin railed against most was white America’s determination to brutally defend its own innocence.”

The Library of America’s box set edition of Baldwin’s work, edited by Toni Morrison and Darryl Pinckney, is “still a delight to read”, novelist Colm Tóibín said during the Hay event. Baldwin’s essays, though he is writing about the civil rights movement of the past, don’t feel dated, “because it’s a mind at work with a glittering tone in his possession”, Tóibín added.

“He is in some ways ‘clippable’, as we’d say now,” Olusoga said. In Baldwin’s appearances on chatshows, which can be found online, “he’s put in positions where he’s asked the sort of questions that Black people feel crushed by: ‘Prove to me race is a problem.’ ‘Why are you always talking about race?’ And he says what you wish you would say under that pressure. He says it beautifully and searingly.”

Olusoga thinks “one of the reasons why Baldwin is having this second life, one of the reasons his words were graffitied on buildings in 2020 during Black Lives Matter, is because he is perfectly suited not just for his age, but for the YouTube age.”

Through his words Baldwin lives on, and there is so much we can still learn and enjoy in what he has left us. So if you’re looking to read or reread his best work, Jenks has put together a Where to start with guide for Guardian readers.

 
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The Booker prize 2024 longlist

From Hisham Matar to Sarah Perry, this year’s Booker prize longlist features 13 stunning works of fiction to add to your reading listSave up to 15% on your copies at the Guardian Bookshop, where every order supports independent journalism

 
 
Guardian Live

Kate Atkinson: Death at the Sign of the Rook

Wednesday 21 August 2024, 7pm-8pm BST
The award-winning author introduces the latest addition to her bestselling crime novels featuring Jackson Brodie. Death at the Sign of the Rook. Atkinson’s brilliantly plotted and supremely entertaining tour de force that pays homage to the masters of the murder mystery genre.

 

Elif Shafak recommends

Elif Shafak.
camera Elif Shafak. Photograph: David Hartley/Rex/Shutterstock

I enjoyed reading Philippa Gregory’s Normal Women: 900 Years of Making History, which brilliantly focuses on the lives of “ordinary” women who have been left out of history. From female soldiers to the makers of the Bayeux tapestry to highwaywomen, it is a fascinating book defying patriarchal amnesia.

Another compelling read was Burn Book: A Tech Love Story by Kara Swisher. Weaving the personal and the political seamlessly, Swisher focuses on the rise of social media platforms, tech titans and the invisible walls inside Silicon Valley.

I have just finished reading a proof copy of Hanif Kureishi’s memoir of the accident that left him paralysed, Shattered, out in October. It is a powerful, brave and deeply moving book that will urge every reader to rethink, re-feel and reconnect with life and love.

Lastly, I would highly recommend You Are Here: Poetry in the Natural World, edited and introduced by US poet laureate Ada Limón. It is both timely and timeless. As she says in the beginning. “Nature is not a place we visit. Nature is who we are.”

A staple of dystopian science fictions is an inner sanctum of privilege and an outer world peopled by the desperate poor. The insiders, living off the exploited labour of the outlands, are indifferent to the horrors beyond their walls.

As environmental breakdown accelerates, the planet itself is being treated as the outer world. A rich core extracts wealth from the periphery, often with horrendous cruelty, while the insiders turn their eyes from the human and environmental costs. The periphery becomes a sacrifice zone. Those in the core shrink to their air-conditioned offices.

At the Guardian, we seek to break out of the core and the mindset it cultivates. Guardian journalists tell the stories the rest of the media scarcely touch: stories from the periphery, such as David Azevedo, who died as a result of working on a construction site during an extreme heat wave in France. Or the people living in forgotten, “redlined” parts of US cities that, without the trees and green spaces of more prosperous suburbs, suffer worst from the urban heat island effect.

Exposing the threat of the climate emergency – and the greed of those who enable it – is central to the Guardian’s mission. But this is a collective effort – and we need your help.

If you can afford to fund the Guardian’s reporting, as a one-off payment or from just £4 per month, it will help us to share the truth about the influence of the fossil fuel giants and those that do their bidding.

Among the duties of journalism is to break down the perceptual walls between core and periphery, inside and outside, to confront power with its impacts, however remote they may seem. This is what we strive to do. Thank you.

George Monbiot,
Guardian columnist

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