Black 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential African-Americans, past and Present FROM THE PUBLISHER
Who are the most influential African-Americans that ever lived? After extensive thought and research, author and educator Dr. Columbus Salley has selected the one hundred most influential African-Americans of all time and ranked them according to their contributions to the struggle for equality. The Black 100 is not a debate on the most talented or most famous black Americans but a listing - and a ranking - of those who have had the greatest impact on the progress toward complete participation in our society. Here are the one hundred who have fundamentally altered the ways in which millions of Americans - of all races - live today. The names in The Black 100 read like a history of African-Americans over nearly four hundred years. They include Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Zora Neale Hurston, Paul Robeson, Muhammad Ali, James Baldwin, Jackie Robinson, Toni Morrison, Marcus Garvey, Thurgood Marshall, and Arthur Ashe. For each of the one hundred Dr. Salley provides a biographical sketch and an account of the reasons why each individual is ranked where he or she is. This revised and updated edition now includes Oprah Winfrey and August Wilson among the one hundred most influential African-Americans.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
A useful collection of mini-profiles of black American leaders in the struggle for equality, this book is marred by the author's admittedly unscientific attempt to rank his subjects by importance. Salley ( What Color Is Your God? Black Consciousness and the Christian Faith ) places Martin Luther King Jr. first and Frederick Douglass second, but overemphasizes certain leaders of the colonial period: the founders of the Free African Society and the Negro Masonic Order are rated well ahead of Thurgood Marshall and Malcolm X. The profiles are usually fair-minded, but Salley sanitizes a few, ignoring James Baldwin's homosexuality and Louis Farrakhan's alleged anti-Semitism. While Salley includes Bill Cosby, Toni Morrison and Colin Powell, he sometimes lacks a contemporary edge, listing filmmaker Oscar Micheaux but not Spike Lee, playwright Lorraine Hansberry but not August Wilson and academic Kenneth Clark but not Henry Louis Gates Jr. Photos not seen by PW. (Jan.)
Library Journal
Who are the most influential African Americans living and dead? Salley, an educator and writer ( What Color Is Your God? , Citadel, 1988), gives his own answer to that question, ranking his choices by their importance to the growth of African American society. For example, he includes David Walker, author of the antislavery pamphlet Walker's Appeal (1829), Mordecai Johnson, the first black president of Howard University, and writer Maya Angelou but omits poet Gwendolyn Brooks and Virginia Proctor Florence, the first black librarian. The biographies are quite good, as are the quotes by and about each person that accompany each article. Though solid, this work duplicates the material already available in The Negro Almanac (Gale, 1990), Who's Who Among Black Americans, 1992 (Gale, 1991), and Black Leaders of the 20th Century ( LJ 4/1/82). It is recommended for public and academic libraries that are either starting up an African American history reference collection or need access to biographies in a hurry. For libraries that have the references listed above, this may not be a necessary purchase.-- Danna C. Bell-Russel, Marymount Univ. Libs., Arlington, Va.
Booknews
Biographical sketches and illustrations of 81 men and 21 women who fill the 100 slots (two shared) in which educator Salley ranks African Americans according to his opinion of their contribution to the struggle for equality. Updated from 1993 and 1994 editions to include Oprah Winfrey and August Wilson. Others come from politics, music, sports, religion, literature, the arts, and other fields. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.