Posts Tagged The Rat that Got Away

Celebrate Black History Month with Fordham Press!

nyccivilrights February is Black History Month, a time to reflect and celebrate the achievements and lives of those who have contributed to and shaped our culture. It has been celebrated annually in the US since 1926 and aims to commemorate the struggles that black Americans overcame to gain the basic rights many take for granted.

Civil Rights in New York City: From World War II to the Giuliani Era, forthcoming in April, documents the significance of the Civil Rights Movement in New York, a movement that has largely been overlooked in the greater span of history. Most schools teach that the battle for civil rights was one primarily waged in the trenches of the Deep South, which has become characterized by the lynchings, riots, and segregation that were commonplace there. However, the fight for equality did not stop at the Mason-Dixon line. In this collection, edited by Clarence Taylor, the campaign for racial justice in NYC is portrayed as having contributed greatly to the nation-wide movement.

Before the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s came the period of Emancipation and Reconstruction following the Civil War of the 1860s. Two books, both to be published in April, examine the events of that period. The Great Task Remaining Before Us: Reconstruction as America’s Continuing Civil War examines the monumental impact that the Civil War had on the national political and social landscape, not only during the War, but before and after as well. It dispels the notion that the Civil War ended with General Lee’s surrender and posits that the period known as Reconstruction was just as fraught with racial and political tensions and hatreds as during the War itself. Freedwomen and the Freedmen’s Bureau: Race, Gender, and Public Policy in the Age of Emancipation examines the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands (commonly referred to as the “Freedmen’s Bureau”) and its relationship to women during post-Civil War Reconstruction. The Bureau was created and tasked with helping assimilate former slaves into American daily life–a gargantuan task. However, little has been written about the Bureau’s work in relation to the women it directly affected, a fact which Mary Farmer-Kaiser, the book’s author, believes has done a great disservice to the agency, its legacy, and understanding of American history.

Turning the clocks ahead to more modern times, The Rat that Got Away: A Bronx Memoir is the story of Allen Jones, a man who became a prominent banker and professional athlete in Europe after escaping from the brutal urban realities of an adolescence in the South Bronx. The Rat that Got Away is more than a story of personal triumph and determination (Jones was a heroin dealer and addict who served jail time before turning his life around), but also an intriguing look at the Bronx in the 1950s and ’60s, at a neighborhood that slid from a place of hope for middle class families to a neighborhood ravaged by unemployment, racial tensions, and drugs. Despite its trials, the South Bronx and its people never gave up, and it’s this story that serves as the heartbeat of the book.

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Library Journal Review: The Rat That Got Away

Library Journal ran a great review of The Rat That Got Away: A Bronx Memoir:

Jones, Allen & Mark Naison. The Rat That Got Away: A Bronx Memoir . Fordham Univ. 2009. c.224p. illus. ISBN 978-0-8232-3102-7. $29.95. AUTOBIOG
Jones pursued two successful careers in Europe: professional basketball player and banker. If you met him, you might not guess he spent his teen years as a heroin dealer in New York. His memoir, written with Naison (history & African American studies, Fordham Univ.) focuses on his experiences growing up in a Bronx public housing project, playing serious basketball, ignoring school, dealing and doing drugs, and eventually lucking into a series of experiences that led to a professional basketball career in Europe. Jones credits his success to his supportive family, coaches, and neighborhood elders, but ultimately his is a tale of luck. The young Jones makes rash decisions, avoids his responsibilities, lies, and steals but also encounters many unlikely second chances. In another writer’s hands, this blessed triumph-over-adversity story line might be trite and irritating, but Jones draws readers in with his direct, conversational style, and the tale is gripping even though readers know it will end well. VERDICT Recommended for memoir lovers and anyone interested in a first-person perspective on 1960s-era urban adolescence. —Emily-Jane Dawson, Multnomah Cty. Lib., Portland, OR

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“The Rat That Got Away” Continues to Attract Readers

"It Takes a Village to Write a Book" Panelists: ANgela O'Donnell, Mark Naison, and Allen Jones

"It Takes a Village to Write a Book" Panelists: Angela O'Donnell, Mark Naison, and Allen Jones

Last Thursday, Allen Jones, author of The Rat That Got Away and co-author, Mark Naison, Ph.D., Professor of History and African-American Studies, participated in a panel discussion on the writing of The Rat That Got Away at Fordham University. The lecture was sponsored by the Center for Catholic Studies and the Bronx African American History Project.  To Read more, visit the Fordham American Studies Blog.

Upcoming events:

  • Tuesday, October 6: Lecture and Book Signing for Harlem RBI, Youth Organization in Harlem, New York
  • Thursday, October 8: Lecture and Book Signing at CUNY Prep, a high school in the Bronx
  • Friday,October 9: Lecture and Book Signing at The Bronx Museum of the Arts 

    The Bronx Museum of the Arts

    The Bronx Museum of the Arts

Visit the FUP website for more information on upcoming events.

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Allen Jones honored by Bulldogs Care Foundation

Allen Jones with co-author, Mark Naison

Allen Jones with co-author, Mark Naison

The Bulldogs Care Foundation held its third annual fundraising event, Tip Off To Success, on Thursday, September 24, 2009, at the Altman Building in Manhattan. The foundation was founded in memory of four Yale University Bulldogs and seeks to support disadvantaged youth as they pursue personal development through programs in athletics, education and mentoring. At the event several outstanding individuals were honored including Allen Jones, author of The Rat That Got Away.

 

Allen Jones receiving 2009 Pillar of Strength award on September 24, 2009.

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High Praise from Urban-Fiction Legend, Shannon Holmes

Shannon Holmes, best-selling author of Never Go Home Again

Shannon Holmes, best-selling author of "Never Go Home Again"

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The writing style of The Rat that Got Away drew me into the book from the first chapter. Allen Jones and Mark Naison paint a vivid portrait leaving nothing to the imagination. This book allows you to journey into the street life from the safety of your own home. This is a must read for any fan or urban literature. Real people in Real life situations. It don’t get no realer than this.
—Shannon Holmes

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