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The searing, visionary memoir of founding Black Panther Huey P. Newton, in a dazzling graphic package Tracing the birth of a revolutionary, Huey P. Newton's famous and oft-quoted autobiography is as much a manifesto as a portrait of the inner circle of America's Black Panther Party. From Newton's impoverished childhood on the streets of Oakland to his adolescence and struggles with the system, from his role in the Black Panthers to his solitary confinement in the Alameda County Jail, Revolutionary Suicide is unrepentant and thought-provoking in its portrayal of inspired radicalism. For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators. Review: Review - Huey Newton was not an exceptionally bright man. As he acknowledges his IQ was ranked at 74 (albeit, the ability of the IQ test to really get at the ingenious essence of man is dubious). His philosophy, and philosophizing, is frequently superficial, layman, and lacking depth. To top it off, one would have to be extremely credulous to walk away from this book believing a lot of the things Huey Newton says, ranging from his deep understanding of analytic philosophy, to dialectical materialism guiding his praxis, from his lack of toleration for all drugs, and his ability to keep calm in the face of pressure, I can safely say, I disbelieve all of it. But what I don't disbelieve is that blacks in the United States have grown up under violently racist conditions, treated as barbarians, ignoramuses, and 3rd class citizens, barely worthy of anything tangible outside of slave shackles. Blacks have been and are tar and feathered in a school system that has no patience for them, and ridiculed and sacked in a capitalist market that only exploits racism as a means for paying whites less because a black men will do the work for less than subsistence wages. This is a system that thrives off inhumane forces that quell any chance of autonomy and dignity, and Huey Newton was first and foremost a victim, before he was a revolutionary. The real exceptional fact of Newton's life is that, as he remarks, despite his Fathers three jobs (of which he always losing and being hired on to new ones), and his seven or eight siblings, he had a loving family, and parents who were committed to doing the best they possibly could, with means they never had enough of. Huey grew up in the kitchen; that was his room, and yet for him, this was totally normal. Unsurprisingly given the racist country he lived in, with the exploitative market that surrounded him, where the only sense of gratification can be found in consumption after exploitative production, and a worthless education where he never learned to read, Newton was basically a delinquent, fighting, stealing cars, hustling, etc. Then he had the bright idea to force himself to read Plato, ten times, until he felt he was both literate, and able to comprehend the material, albeit superficially. The spark reading gave Huey, the craving for more, of something better (which is really all philosophy is), turned him into a passionate revolutionary, who although no erudite, warrants nothing but praise for surmounting insurmountable circumstances, and creating the Black Panther Party. Huey actively taught his community, and black communities outside his own city, how to legally arm themselves, learn the law, and defend themselves - as a community - from police brutality, and malfeasance. This book is a memoir of his struggles, before and during the creation of the Black Panther Party, and his constant trials, and stints in jail. Again, as an intellectual, Huey does not rank highly, but as a serious committed revolutionary, of action, focused solely on results, he ranks amongst the highest and most effective, especially given his circumstances. Read this book. Learn some valuable history, and maybe, go out and arm your godamn community with knowledge and.... Review: Great Read! - I enjoyed reading about how the Black Panthers got started and some of the corruption the police and judges (legal system did to them,) according to Huey. I admire him putting his life on the line with putting his ideas into action. I wish it was a better ending for him and the Black Panthers. He had some good ideas about helping the Black community.
| Best Sellers Rank | #27,102 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #67 in Political Leader Biographies #98 in Black & African American Biographies #427 in Memoirs (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,370 Reviews |
C**B
Review
Huey Newton was not an exceptionally bright man. As he acknowledges his IQ was ranked at 74 (albeit, the ability of the IQ test to really get at the ingenious essence of man is dubious). His philosophy, and philosophizing, is frequently superficial, layman, and lacking depth. To top it off, one would have to be extremely credulous to walk away from this book believing a lot of the things Huey Newton says, ranging from his deep understanding of analytic philosophy, to dialectical materialism guiding his praxis, from his lack of toleration for all drugs, and his ability to keep calm in the face of pressure, I can safely say, I disbelieve all of it. But what I don't disbelieve is that blacks in the United States have grown up under violently racist conditions, treated as barbarians, ignoramuses, and 3rd class citizens, barely worthy of anything tangible outside of slave shackles. Blacks have been and are tar and feathered in a school system that has no patience for them, and ridiculed and sacked in a capitalist market that only exploits racism as a means for paying whites less because a black men will do the work for less than subsistence wages. This is a system that thrives off inhumane forces that quell any chance of autonomy and dignity, and Huey Newton was first and foremost a victim, before he was a revolutionary. The real exceptional fact of Newton's life is that, as he remarks, despite his Fathers three jobs (of which he always losing and being hired on to new ones), and his seven or eight siblings, he had a loving family, and parents who were committed to doing the best they possibly could, with means they never had enough of. Huey grew up in the kitchen; that was his room, and yet for him, this was totally normal. Unsurprisingly given the racist country he lived in, with the exploitative market that surrounded him, where the only sense of gratification can be found in consumption after exploitative production, and a worthless education where he never learned to read, Newton was basically a delinquent, fighting, stealing cars, hustling, etc. Then he had the bright idea to force himself to read Plato, ten times, until he felt he was both literate, and able to comprehend the material, albeit superficially. The spark reading gave Huey, the craving for more, of something better (which is really all philosophy is), turned him into a passionate revolutionary, who although no erudite, warrants nothing but praise for surmounting insurmountable circumstances, and creating the Black Panther Party. Huey actively taught his community, and black communities outside his own city, how to legally arm themselves, learn the law, and defend themselves - as a community - from police brutality, and malfeasance. This book is a memoir of his struggles, before and during the creation of the Black Panther Party, and his constant trials, and stints in jail. Again, as an intellectual, Huey does not rank highly, but as a serious committed revolutionary, of action, focused solely on results, he ranks amongst the highest and most effective, especially given his circumstances. Read this book. Learn some valuable history, and maybe, go out and arm your godamn community with knowledge and....
S**R
Great Read!
I enjoyed reading about how the Black Panthers got started and some of the corruption the police and judges (legal system did to them,) according to Huey. I admire him putting his life on the line with putting his ideas into action. I wish it was a better ending for him and the Black Panthers. He had some good ideas about helping the Black community.
R**Y
Revolutionary Suicide
I didnโt know much about the Black Panther Party or Huey P. Newton before reading this book โ only what I was โtaughtโ in school. And I donโt think Huey P. Newton was mentioned at all. He was an amazing human being. He was functionally illiterate when he graduated from high school and taught himself to read using Platoโs Republic. Not Dick and Jane โ Plato! After that, he read widely and formed a lot of the Black Pantherโs philosophy from the books he read โ Karl Marx, Mao Zedong and the like. He was very intelligent and a great strategist. In many ways, Black peopleโs interactions with the police have actually gotten worse since that time. The Black Panthers openly carried firearms in public. Can you imagine if Black people tried to do that today? They also carried law books with them and would read from them to police officers when police officers were trying to wrongly arrest somebody something or otherwise violate a personโs rights. If a Black person tried to pull out a law book today during a police encounter, it would not go over well. The policeman would get mad and the situation would escalate. But back then, it actually worked sometimes. Sometimes the Black Panthers would come across a policeman stopping a citizen and they would stand at a distance with their weapons to let the police know that they were being watched. Today, people do the same thing by pulling out their cell phones to record these situations. Itโs sad that over forty years later, the police still need bystanders to hold them accountable for their behavior. I learned a lot about Newton and the Black Panthers from reading this book. I still have more to learn and plan on seeking out more books about this topic and time in history. Highly recommended.
V**N
Huey Needs a TV Series Already...
In 47 short years, Huey led a more interesting life than most people I know in half the time, including myself. I believe his story is worth telling because most people only equate him to this iconic, fearless figure. Huey was vulnerable, introverted, yet brilliant, and creative. In my research of him, those in his immediate circle say he was honest to a fault and sensitive; throughout Revolutionary Suicide, he wasn't hesitant to admit his mistakes and go into accounts so descriptive that I didn't only read them but saw them. As a Party leader, Huey was far from an egotist and spoke warmly of Bobby Seale and his contributions while Huey was a political prisoner. What's interesting is that a year after this book was published, he expelled Bobby as Chairman. I'd recommend reading Elaine Brown's A Taste of Power for further insight into that incident. He went into great detail about his trials for the murder of Officer John Frey, and the revelations were unbelievable. The state and government's lengths to execute him for a crime he didn't commit shows just how great an impact he had on the People. I love learning he never lost his sense of humility and humanity; Huey still wanted to be on a person-to-person basis with the community. However, his imprisonment and media sensationalization pushed him into a limelight he didn't want to be in. The truth is that Huey just wanted to aid in advancing and raising the consciousness of oppressed people, particularly Black people. Between the books To Die for the People, Revolutionary Suicide, A Taste of Power, The Huey P. Newton Reader, and Huey: Spirit of the Panther, an entire television series can reflect the facts of who Huey P. Newton was as a person as well as a movement leader. In addition to these materials, I strongly recommend watching interviews with Huey if you can. In your reading and viewing, you'll find that he was a person like everyone else but pulled through a wringer the last twenty-something years of his life, especially. I hope your eyes are opened.
M**A
Lessons in Self Determination
There are few individuals in which can be found such an impressive display of courage and cunning; in a life so richly fortified with all the requisite experiences, Huey P. Newton has certainly distinguished himself as one of these. Anxious to gain a greater understanding into the life and times of one of the leading figures of the BLACK POWER MOVEMENT of the late 60s early 70s, I dove head-first into the three hundred and fifty-page book with all the eagerness of a child on X-mas eve. So if you're looking for a stoic and impersonal review with the trappings of cold objectivity skip this one. In a few adjectives, the book is: Deeply contemplative; noticeably disarming; endearing as it relates the childhood stories of love and strong parental guidance; full of gusto as he sprints into the unrestrained exploits of teenage bravado; it is resoundingly defiant particularly against the interlocking pillars of law enforcement and the public education system, both working in tandem to confine mostly black youth by brutal repression and low expectations; it is clever, hopeful, painful at times, honest and even doubtful; but most importantly it is full of numerous examples of an unjust system (white supremacy) that has demonstrated it's contempt for people of African descent many times over and continues to do so till this day. The road less traveled -some believe- can seem suicidal. Oftentimes, it's the revolutionary road to self-discovery and true freedom. In chronological fashion, he writes most extensively about the concrete foundations of his youth in such a way that one easily begins to conclude the formation of the Black Panther Party (BPP) as natural and maybe even inevitable. I like the fact that he christens each chapter with corresponding quotes, usually by other black authors. He spends too much time going over the various court trials he's had to endure for my liking. This notwithstanding, the book should be counted among those that make the Summer reading list of every high-schooler in black America and beyond. It is an eye-opener, giving the reader more than just a peak behind the thin veil of American politeness. The Black Panther is our brother and son... the one who wasn't afraid. - George Jackson, Soledad Brother
C**R
Revolutionary Suicide: by Huey P. Newton
This book is about the life of Huey P. Newton during his grassroots stages of him and Bobby Seale beginning The Black Panther Party as well as some brief insight into his childhood/adolescence and the events that help to develop and make an impact upon his life which made him decide to begin an organization which revolutionizes the way African-Americans fought back against a system which didn't acknowledge their civil rights or their rights being human beings. This is a must read for anyone who wants any insight on the sacrifices and struggles to achieve human rights during the Civil Rights Era.
N**E
It's called a deckle edge
I'm not going to review the contents of the book, you can find that anywhere for free. As a printing, this is entirely adequate. The cover art by Ho Che Anderson and deckle edge pages give it an edgy (hah) appearance that might undermine the original tone but do make it a handsome printing.
M**S
ITS ABOUT TIME
Penguin FINALLY re-released legendary Black Panther Huey P. Newton's auto-biography. This was previously unavailable until 2009 (the only way to read it was to find a copy at the library if you were lucky (most of these have been stolen because of there collectors value) or to pay an exorbitant price for a 1st or 2nd press - even 2nd press paperbacks in bad shape were going for at the least around the 50 dollar range, and the date kept getting pushed forward for this re-release. Finally, we can read the classic "Revolutionary Suicide" by visionary, writer, activist and poet Huey P. Newton. While I take issues with some of Huey's politics, I believe he was a true revolutionary who died because he went against the rich and those in control, and was a threat, just like Black Pather Fred Hampton, murdered in his Chicago home at 3 or 4 in the morning while SLEEPING in his bed by Chicago Police officers who open fired on his sleeping body - completely unprovoked. Despite how you feel about Huey, you should own this book, along with his collection of other writings, and the artistic drama that stages a speech/performance by Huey to a small indoor audience called "Huey P. Newton Story" More notes on Huey P and the Black Panthers: The Panthers revealed to us that we don't need permission to act in our own best interest in a corrupt system that exploits and rides off the back of the poor - as many other great movements and activists have tried to remind the public of, like MLK, like Joe Hill, like Emma Goldman, like the more mature activists involved early in the Occupy movement. Huey's writing is a must read for any Huey P. Newton fan or anyone interested in black panther theories or activism in general. I think that the Panthers focused too much on race on not class (it is the ruling class, predominately white, that is the object of the theoried oppression, not the white race, and the Panthers and Huey made the bad mistake of separating like minded progressive poor whites or possible ones that they could have recruited by using bad rhetoric, such as constantly naming the enemy as "The White Man" not "The Ruling Class" or even "The Ruling Class White Man," and even rhetoric like "The white devil." They in turn ostracized a large group of people who were the same as them and were fighting or could have been fighting for the same thing. While they essentially did have there eyes on the proper enemy, they, as I said, made the huge mistake, including Huey, of using that improper rhetoric and separating many working class, poor, and other whites who could have been allies to their civil rights and other causes, and also demonized themselves this way in the media). Despite this, the Huey P. Newton reader, Revolutionary Suicide, and other Black Panther books, are must reads for any activist, anarchist, anarcho-socialist, libertarian, or simply humanitarian interested in changing the world in order to add to their socio-political tool belt.
S**A
Necessary reading
This book reveals much of what is untold about Huey P Newton and the Black Panther party, they were a revolutionary political group aiming to create a better world for black people.
A**Y
Vital reading for black history in America
The memoir of Black Panthers founder Huey P Newton. Newton writes in such a matter-of-fact way; he's not trying to win the reader over, he mostly doesn't play to his ego, he doesn't shy away from the negative aspects of this personality and history (or he simply doesn't recognise them). A large portion of the book follows his upbringing and what it meant to be a black person in America at that time. He sets up the foundations of the Black Panther party, the history of which I knew very little of. There's no lengthy diatribes throughout the book, Newton was a very clever and measured man who could leave his emotions at the door for the good of the party. There are many flaws to his character, and perhaps his stubbornness and tunnel vision helped the demise of the party more than he'd care to admit, but his ideology and the party's 10 point program of a better society is not as radical as some may lead one to believe. His writing of his trial is especially enthralling and given my lack of prior knowledge of the man, I was on the edge of my seat throughout. I recommend this book to anyone interested in the Black Panthers or purely just as the story and a complex and nuanced human being.
P**O
Poor Quality
I haven't read the book yet. However the quality and finishing of the book is quite poor, I am not sure I was the unlucky one here.
A**R
Five Stars
I bought this book for my boyfriend and he really likes it.
T**R
Tremendous and open account of a revolutionary
I purchased this book due to to a keen interest in th civil rights movement era, however whatever information I came across about Huey Newton before placed him in a very bad light. This bad light placed upon this revolutionary I didn't question much, however after getting into this book I saw the man in a new light. This book is a great account of Huey by himself, and way it flows and develops is such a great read. Huey starts with explaining his life's a youngster, the way he saw society as a child and the family life he came from. This introduction to his family gives him a human element, something not seen before as he his affiliation with the party always to me, made me see him as a symbol. This book breaks down that symbolic image and shows a individual, a individual who saw, tested and studied rigorously many theories in life ranging from love to ways of living. What I love about this book is you get to see how he became to be the person he was, he was developing further even after the party. But the book shows the many things that bonded together to let Huey Newton become the revolutionary committed to people which he became. I'd recommend this book to anyone, anyone with a open mind wishing to see how a man became the martyr for his people.great man and a very great and almost life changing book
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