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NAACP Image Award for Outstanding
Literary Work
Nonfiction
The
NAACP Image Awards honor outstanding works in the literature and entertainment
fields.
Fiction
| Children's
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2008
- Don Cheadle & John Prendergast. Not on Our Watch: The Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond
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2007
- Barack Obama. The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream
- The junior senator from Illinois discusses how to transform U.S. politics, calling for a return to America's original ideals and revealing how they can address such issues as globalization and the function of religion in public life.
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2006
- Michael Eric Dyson. Is Bill Cosby Right?
- "In May 2004 Cosby delivered a speech at the NAACP Awards in which he said he blamed what he termed the "knuckleheads" of the African American community for poor parenting, poor academic performance, sexual promiscuity and criminal behavior. The audience laughed and applauded. Here, Dyson (humanities, U. of Pennsylvania) comments on both the speech and the reaction, finding a growing cultural divide between the "Afristocracy" (the African American elite and professional classes) and the "Ghettocracy" (the African American poor, working class and incarcerated). He finds evidence of abandonment of the aims of the civil rights movement among the elite, and a growing perception that the poor have no one to blame but themselves, despite obvious, ongoing and vicious racial discrimination in America.
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2005
- Maya Angelou. Hallelujah!
The Welcome Table: A Lifetime of Memories with Recipies
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Maya Angelou remembers key moments in her life centering on
the dinner table--and shares over 60 of her own recipes. Dishes
include fried meat pies, biscuits, potato salad, smoked pork chops,
Beef Wellington, chicken livers, Minnesota wild rice, pot roast,
and wilted lettuce. Color photos throughout.
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2004
- Michael Eric Dyson. Why
I Love Black Women
- In an era marred by bigoted and baleful beliefs about black
women--from hip-hop to the pulpit, from the streets to scholarly
focus--Dyson offers a welcome reprieve from cultural madness.
"Why I Love Black Women" explodes taboos while it celebrates the
perseverance and the pride, the sensuality and the sophistication,
of African-American women everywhere.
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2003
- Tavis Smiley. Keeping
the Faith
- An inspiring collection of personal narratives about love, loss,
and faith by African Americans from all walks of life, and introduced
by popular NPR talk show host Tavis Smiley.
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2002
Tina Andrews. Sally Hemings, An American
Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial True Story |
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2001
Julian Bond & Sondra Kathryn Wilson.
Life Every Voice and Sing |
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2000
- Iyanla Vanzant. Yesterday,
I Cried
- Vanzant, who has inspired millions with her bestselling books
recalls the turning points in her own life and discusses the universal
lessons they teach.
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1999
- Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee. With
Ossie & Ruby: In This Life Together
- Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee are legendary stars of the American
stage, television, and film, cherished not merely for their gifts
as actors but also for their lifelong commitment to human rights,
family values, and the black community. Now, in a joint memoir
that celebrates half a century of successful marriage, they look
back on the extraordinary careers that earned each a Presidential
Medal for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts.
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