Randall, Dudley (Vol. 135) - Patricia Gow (review date 1973)
Patricia Gow (review date 1973)
SOURCE: “Anthology in Tribute to Malcolm,” in Freedomways, Vol. 13, No. 2, Second Quarter, 1973, pp. 167-168.
[In the following review of For Malcolm X, Gow praises anthologies of its type for paying tribute to important figures in black history.]
He fell upon his face before Allah the raceless in whose blazing Oneness all
Were one. He rose, renewed, renamed, became much more than there was time for him to be.
“Labbayk! Labbayk!,” Robert Hayden
The prose additions to this collection [For Malcolm X] are almost as interesting as the poems themselves. The book begins with a six-page biography of Malcolm X and a brief introduction explaining the contents. In the latter the editors claim: “There is no black, regardless of his agreement or disagreement with Malcolm's politics, goals, or racial theories, whether he's a serf in Mississippi, a cat on the corner...
[The entire page is 571 words long]
