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  1. #1

    Default Invitation from Assignment Detroit blogger

    On my initiative, not any request, here's a new post of possible interest, headlined Getting A Read On Detroit.
    What books would you recommend to someone who was trying to get a grasp on Detroit, both as it was and as it is now? What books do you think help sum up who we are, how we got this way and where we're headed?
    Blogger Darrell Dawsey kicks it off with a dozen of his picks, including 2 by Thomas Sugrue and must-reads by Carl Taylor, Kevin Boyle, James Boggs, Donald Goines, Zev Chafets, Gavrilovich/McGraw and even Butch Jones.

    Reader 'cxiro' adds the obvious classic by W. Hawkins Ferry.

    No doubt there's room for DY forumers to jump in . . .
    List as many as you'd like, from any genre, any year, any publishing house, any author
    Link again.

  2. #2

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    What book should be thrown at somebody who wants to understand Detroit? That is to say, what book, when you are hit in the head with it, feels most like Detroit?

  3. #3

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    tell em to get out on the streets and check it out

  4. #4

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    Its hard to read when you are driving.

  5. #5

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    mauser, I think the question is just one for the sake of generating ideas. I believe the author grew up in Detroit.

  6. #6

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    Land of Opportunity [[I don't know the author) which documents the rise and fall of the Chambers Bros. Better written than the Butch Jones YBI.

    Rivethead by Ben Hamper. Although situated in Flint, pretty much gives you the early 80's version of the first wave of auto jobs being sent across the border, and the varying reasons as to why. A pretty funny read, too.

  7. #7

    Default Pair of follow-ups . . .

    Land of Opportunity, subtitled One Family's Quest for the American Dream in the Age of Crack, is by William K. Adler, came out in '95 and is on Dawsey's list. "I grew up in the very same neighborhood where most of this takes place," he notes.

    Used copies start at $2 on Amazon, incidentally.
    Quote Originally Posted by cman710 View Post
    I believe the author grew up in Detroit.
    Correct, Cman. Darrell graduated from Southeastern in the mid-80s and is a former DetNews reporter who gets "out on the streets" each time he leaves his family's Chandler Park Drive home.

    As Cman also suggests, his post explains that book recommendations are solicited as a discussion-starter.
    These are just some of the books I think are worth reading to learn about the D. What would you recommend?

  8. #8
    Lorax Guest

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    Historically speaking, Silas Farmer's "History of Detroit and Michigan," of which I am proud to say I have the 1890 printing of the two-volume set in pristine condition!

    Also, "This is Detroit" written at Detroit's 250th birthday in 1951, and is a snapshot with only brief mention of the '43 riots and still had a rosy future predicted for the city.

    Malcolm Bingay's "Detroit Is My Own Hometown" written in the late 40's and is one person's recollections of living through the amazing technological transformations of the turn of the century forward.
    Last edited by Lorax; December-11-09 at 05:35 PM.

  9. #9

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    From the old forum's Discuss Detroit » DISCUSS DETROIT! » Best Detroit Books Poll: Sugrue surges to lead thread:
    931 The Origins of the Urban Crisis:Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit - Thomas Sugrue
    260 Middlesex [[Jeffrey Eugenidies)
    221 The Detroit Almanac - Detroit Free Press
    221 Working Detroit
    208 From Soupy to Nutz
    195 Arc of Justice: A Saga of Race, Civil Rights, and Murder in the Jazz Age
    151 American City: Detroit Architecture, 1845-2005
    141 Made in Detroit: A South of 8 Mile Memoir
    128 AIA Guide to Detroit
    117 Grit, Noise, Revolution
    101 Art In The Stations: The Detroit People Mover
    100 American Odyssey
    100 City Primieval by Elmore Leonard
    100 History of Detroit and Michigan and Wayne County
    100 Kick Out The Jams: Detroit's Cass Corridor--1963-1980
    100 Metro Detroit Boxing
    100 The Final Season: Fathers, Sons and One Last Season In A Classic American Ballpark by Tom Stanton
    100 Whiskey River
    97 The Detroit Artists Market, 1932-1982 a Partnership in Creativity
    92 Art in Detroit Public Places
    89 Virgin Suicides
    80 Art Deco in Detroit
    80 Motown
    80 The Purple Gang - Kavieff
    66 Detroit: Then and Now
    64 Detroit's Downtown Movie Palaces
    64 Granite Harbor
    64 Jitterbug
    64 The Quotations of Mayor Coleman A. Young
    64 The Way I Am
    64 The Way It Was: Glimpses of Detroit's History Through the Pages of Hour Magazine
    51 Bob-Lo: An Island in Troubled Waters
    51 Deep Summer
    51 Dennis Coffey
    51 Detroit: I Do Mind Dying: A Study in Urban Revolution [[Dan Georgakas and Marvin Surkin)
    41 Our Hearts Were Young and Gay
    41 Quotations of Mayor Coleman A. Young
    41 Sirens of Chrome: The Enduring Allure of Auto Show Models
    41 Sugartown
    41 Talking Shops
    41 The Buildings of Detroit: A History [[W. Hawkins Ferry)
    33 Before the Ghetto
    26 Devil's Night [[Ze'ev Chafets )
    26 Hard Stuff
    26 The Changing Face of Inequality
    26 WestSiders:Remembering Detroit's old westside, 1920-1950 : a pictorial history of the westsiders
    21 Calico Palace
    21 Dancing in the Street
    21 Farmers Detroit HIstory
    17 From the Canon's mouth: The civil war letters of Alpheus Williams
    17 Frontier Metropolis
    17 Up from the Streets: Detroit Art from the Duffy Warehouse Collection
    14 Dudley Randall, Broadside Press, and the Black Arts Movement in Detroit, 1960-1995
    14 Poems of Jim Gustafson
    14 YBI The Autobiography of Butch Jones [[a piece of tripe, but entertaining

  10. #10
    lilpup Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Lorax View Post
    Historically speaking, Silas Farmer's "History of Detroit and Michigan," of which I am proud to say I have the 1890 printing of the two-volume set in pristine condition!

    Also, "This is Detroit" written at Detroit's 250th birthday in 1951, and is a snapshot with only brief mention of the '43 riots and still had a rosy future predicted for the city.

    Malcolm Bingay's "Detroit Is My Own Homtown" written in the late 40's and is one person's recollections of living through the amazing technological transformations of the turn of the century forward.
    There is also a "This Is Detroit 1701-2001" that was done for the 300th.

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