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THE TRAYVON GENERATION

YESTERDAY, TODAY, TOMORROW

Elizabeth Alexander, who delivered a poem at the first inauguration of Barack Obama, narrates her essay on white supremacy and her opposition to it. The work is also about the nature of racism and its effects--and how expressions of it and responses to it have changed over recent decades. Those who don't believe there is institutionalized racism in the U.S. should listen to this. For the first few minutes, Alexander seems slightly hesitant as she uses pauses for emphasis, but she soon hits her stride, delivering her own words--and those of the artists, musicians, and poets she quotes--with strength, passion, and controlled anger.

Pub Date: April 5, 2022

Duration: 2 hrs, 30 mins

DD ISBN: 9781549190902

Publisher: Hachette Audio

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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    FEAR AND FURY

    THE REAGAN EIGHTIES, THE BERNIE GOETZ SHOOTINGS, AND THE REBIRTH OF WHITE RAGE

    A gripping account.

    Starting with the NYC subway shooting of four unarmed Black teenagers by Bernie Goetz in 1984, the author shows how the court system’s failure to serve justice to the white perpetrator is one of many examples of racial injustice caused by white anger about rapid societal changes. Thompson discusses how, with the failed trickle-down economic policies of the Reagan years, simmering rage about these and other stressors for white people were brought to a boil by sensationalized media coverage and divisive, opportunistic politicians. Though narrator Erin Bennett’s pacing will sound unusually slow to some listeners, her connection with this story of crime and justice and its broader context is exceptional. Her tone and her interpretive skill promote effortless engagement with the author’s nuanced examination of how economic and societal stress have led to so much untethered anger.

    A gripping account.

    Pub Date: Feb. 10, 2026

    Duration: 14 hrs

    DD ISBN: 9798217295678

    Publisher: Random House Audio

    Review Posted Online: March 17, 2026

    Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2026

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      ISLAND AT THE EDGE OF THE WORLD

      THE FORGOTTEN HISTORY OF EASTER ISLAND

      The mysteries of Easter Island point to some familiar culprits.

      British archeologist Pitts proves a compelling narrator for his solidly researched history of Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island. Conventional wisdom sees the ruin of Rapa Nui as a case of ecological collapse, its limited resources squandered on erecting hundreds of giant stone heads. In a steady, subdued voice, Pitts tracks another history. Rapa Nui was first visited by westerners in 1722, and the inhabitants suffered the fate of many native peoples: slave raids, novel diseases, and cultural erasure by missionaries. One by one, Pitt demolishes the various conjectures Rapa Nui has since inspired while building solid evidence for another, more plausible narrative with a very different message to impart.

      The mysteries of Easter Island point to some familiar culprits.

      Pub Date: Jan. 27, 2026

      Duration: 12 hrs, 15 mins

      DD ISBN: 9780063344709

      Publisher: Harper Audio

      Review Posted Online: Feb. 24, 2026

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