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Beinhaltet den Namen: Adam D Henig

Werke von Adam Henig

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Adam Henig is the author of Alex Haley’s Roots: An Author’s Odyssey (2014) and Baseball Under Siege: The Yankees, the Cardinals, and a Doctor’s Battle to Integrate Spring Training (2016). A native of Castro Valley, California, Adam is a graduate of California State University, Chico, and lives with his family in Gilroy, California. [Official website]

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Alex Haley’s Roots: An Author’s Odyssey by Adam Henig is a short biography of the man who wrote one of the blockbusters of the 1970s. Henig earned his bachelor’s degree in political science with an emphasis in international and cultural relations from the University of California, Chico.

I was in the seventh grade when Roots premiered on network television. The image of the slave “Toby” being whipped was burned into my mind. “Your name is Toby, I want to hear you say your name.” Toby answers “Kunta Kinte” and the whipping continues. This was a powerful series coming on the heels of the bicentennial celebrations the previous year. This was also something I could actually watch because it was on network TV and not at the theaters. The movie mini series was probably the biggest television event in my childhood.

Alex Haley’s Roots covers mostly the time period during the release of the movie and the book tours that follow. There are a few flashbacks Haley’s earlier life. For as popular as Roots was, I knew very little about Haley before reading this book. A career in the Coast Guard, writer for Playboy, and co-writer of Malcolm X’s biography round out a successful sounding life. His personal life, however, had several failings mostly with his personal relationships and marriages.

One point that is brought out in the book, and later in the court cases, is whether the book was fiction or non-fiction. Doubleday released the book as nonfiction, although they never questioned the lack of bibliography or citations. Haley claimed it to be historical fiction. Part of that I imagine was part of the 1970s culture. You could hardly turn on a Sunday night movie without hearing “Based on a true story” which to a great many people meant they were watching a documentary. The fiction/non-fiction/research aspect of the book takes up a good deal of this biography. It adds a good deal of insight into the Haley and his work.

I walked away from this book with much more information and understanding than I expected. The biography itself takes up just over half the book. Unlike, Roots there is a copious amount of documentation. Henig has certainly done his homework and presents in a scholarly fashion. Also included in the book is a section by the author documenting some of his research experiences and his experience self-publishing Alex Haley’s Roots. A very good biography of a man that took center stage in the late 1970s with a books and movies that brought recognition to the people that were quietly written out of the American celebration in 1976.
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evil_cyclist | Mar 16, 2020 |
The heroes of the story of the integration of baseball are usually Jackie Robinson, Larry Doby or some other figure on the field or in the front office but their successes were made possible by the work done behind the scenes by others. The central figure of “Under One Roof” is Dr. Ralph Wimbish, an African-American internist who served the black community in St. Petersburg, Florida in the 1950s and 1960s. Dr. Wimbish seized the opportunity presented by his prosperity and status to become a leader of desegregation efforts in his home town.

In Wimbish’s day St. Petersburg was the Spring Training home of the New York Yankees (later the Mets) and the St. Louis Cardinals. Wimbish befriended black Cardinals and Yankees, found them lodging and food and, eventually, spent evenings with them integrating restaurants in the area by just walking in and forcing the staff to sear or refuse them.

I have often thought that those of us who did not experience segregation can really imagine its features, major and subtle. My main interests in the work are the Cardinals I rooted for, Bill White, Bob Gibson and Curt flood. It never occurred to me that, instead of staying in the team hotel they were put up in private homes or that they could not dine or swim with their teammates. Ultimately it was Dr. Wimbish’s determination not to get housing for the players and apply other pressure that resulted in getting the whole teams “Under One Roof”.

This book is a short read. Author Adam Henig has packed a well-crafted tale into an easy read. Readers interested in baseball, the Civil Rights Movement or who are just curious about Southern life in the 1950s and 60s will not want to miss “Under One Roof”.

I did receive a free copy of this book.
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JmGallen | Nov 3, 2016 |

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