CHAIRMAN: Letters to Fred Hampton
A white boy from the Mississippi Delta writes to a Black revolutionary who never made it to twenty-two—and finds the revolution still breathing.
Yellaboy was three when a drunk driver ran him over, then backed over him again. That second pass taught him how America treats its poor. He grew up on 11th Street in Yazoo City—the dead end where the pavement stopped and the dirt began, where Black men took in the only white boy without asking questions.
Shay named him. Sixteen years old, she looked at this too-white-to-be-Black, too-Black-to-be-white kid and baptized him Yellaboy—the yellow between. Then she put Fred Hampton's words in his hands: You can kill a revolutionary, but you can't kill the revolution.
Shay died. Yellaboy didn't.
Written as direct letters to Chairman Fred Hampton fifty-five years after the FBI put four bullets in him, this is street prophecy from a survivor: about the Fake Economy that keeps poor communities feeding the system that starves them, about climbing out of the Bottle when the Hole was built for you, about Bobby Jo who stayed when leaving made sense, about hope not as feeling but as discipline—showing up to the seven-person meeting, planting seeds you won't see grow.
Unapologetic. Profane. Prayerful. For readers of Between the World and Me who need the Delta version. For anyone who thinks the revolution died in 1969.
The sermon is unfinished. That is the point.
Nous publions uniquement les avis qui respectent les conditions requises. Consultez nos conditions pour les avis.