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Speaking Freely: A Memoir

Included in Speaking Freely are, as Nat Hentoff writes: "My lives as a radical (according to the FBI); an 'enslaver of women' (according to pro-choicers); a suspiciously unpredictable... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Speak, Notebook

In writing his memoirs, a journalist has an advantage over a civilian, in having a record of his life. And where Nat Hentoff's notebooks left off, his FBI files provided items he'd forgotten, such as the name of the haberdashery where, at age 11, he'd had his first job, and some which he'd never known, such as his parents' Russian birthplaces.A Village Voice and Washington Post columnist, and the author of some 40 non-fiction and fiction books for adults and children, the catholicity of Nat Hentoff's interests and his career of taking gutsy stands have made him an institution in a profession pervaded by mediocrity and conformity.Hentoff's atheism, his support of trade unions and flag burners, and his quaint faith in school integration that most American blacks no longer believe in make him look like your standard-issue liberal. Yet the same man defended the right of Nazis to march in Skokie, Illinois, opposes abortion, and has fought against a purported "right of privacy" that would allow women to dispose of children born with birth defects. It is no wonder that many of Hentoff's colleagues at the Village Voice have stopped speaking to him.The sequel to Hentoff's 1987 memoir Boston Boy, which told of his "exuberantly anti-Semitic hometown," Speaking Freely briskly covers his 50-plus years in journalism with a wry, self-deprecating humor that his columns and First Amendment books often lack.Hentoff enjoyed early success writing on jazz for Down Beat magazine, whose New York office he ran. In 1956, he got fired. It seems he had hired a "black" secretary without getting permission from the home office in Chicago. The magazine, which was devoted to black music, had never hired a black staffer. Ironically, Hentoff reports, "Several years later I found out that the secretary at issue was not black, but Egyptian. Of course, these days, the creators and practitioners of Afrocentricity would rule that, being Egyptian, the new secretary was, of course, black. Either way, I would still have been fired."Hentoff sketches several poignant portraits of jazz greats. He tells of a 1980s concert at Lincoln Center in Dizzy Gillespie's honor. "I hadn't seen Dizzy...for a few years.... In the hallway, Dizzy was talking with someone, saw me, ran over, and grabbed me in a bear hug. To the man he was talking to, Dizzy, grinning, explained, 'It's like seeing an old broad you used to go with.'" Hentoff comments that "This old broad has seldom been so honored."Hentoff tells sadly of the deterioration of New York's Village Voice, once as vividly unpredictable as it is now a museum of political correctness, and of his hopes for its reinvigoration under its current editor-in-chief, Don Forst. For the past several years, I have found Hentoff to be the sole reason for reading the Voice.Hentoff's turn against abortion quarantined him at the virulently pro-abortion Voice. He has subsequently campaigned against all forms of euthanasia. He also attacked the practice of testing preg

In the tradition of Orwell

Nat Hentoff is a delightful oddity - that old-fashioned leftist who's not afraid to take on the Establishment Left. Thus, small minds to the left of center absolutely hate him - much as they hated Orwell, Camus and de Beauvoir, and for the same reasons: He won't toe the line. (The Right, of course, simply chooses to ignore him ... or more likely can't understand him.)In this second installment of his ongoing autobiography, Hentoff's love of jazz is again front and center - there has never been a better chronicler of jazz, and if Hentoff's prose is a bit more stilted than his favorite musicians, he still captures that sense of life that jazz embodies.An unapologetic integrationist, Hentoff is also one of the most color-blind individuals you will ever read.Reading this book also brings you to a realization that Hentoff opposes abortion for the exact same reason he opposes the death penalty - it is a consistent ethos, even if the Left (such as it is these days) finds itself compelled to try to silence him.If you despair of the left ever finding its way again, if you feel dismayed by the increasing conformity of American liberals, then read this book.

Interesting!

This book is a very good account of how Nat Hentoff went from writing about Jazz to civil liberties issues for the Village Voice. Mr Hentoff is quite a unique individual. He has been called "the Anti-Christ" by Rev Lewis Farrakhan, "an unpredictable civil libertarian" by the ACLU (which he later resigned from), an "enslaver of women" by supporters of abortion rights (because of his opposition to abortion), a "dangerous defender of alleged pornography" by anti-porn feminists and has even raised the eyebrows of Cardinal John O'Connor because he is Jewish but is also an atheist. I felt Hentoff gave interesting insights about the issues he wrote about with honesty and affection. Although, I disagree with his opposition to abortion (he does, however, oppose criminalizing the procedure), opposition to euthenasia and support for mandatory AIDS tests for babies, I thought this book was very well written.
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