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Soul on Ice

Soul on Ice at Amazon.com


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ISBN: 038533379X - Soul on Ice  
Title:Soul on Ice
Author:Eldridge Cleaver
Publisher:Delta
Type:Book / Paperback
Publication Date:12 January, 1999
ISBN / ISBN-13:038533379X  /  9780385333795
List Price:$15.00
You Save:$4.80
Amazon Price:$10.20

* This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $6.85.



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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

Product Description
The now-classic memoir that shocked, outraged, and ultimately changed the way America looked at the civil rights movement and the black experience.

By turns shocking and lyrical, unblinking and raw, the searingly honest memoirs of Eldridge Cleaver are a testament to his unique place in American history. Cleaver writes in Soul on Ice, "I'm perfectly aware that I'm in prison, that I'm a Negro, that I've been a rapist, and that I have a Higher Uneducation." What Cleaver shows us, on the pages of this now classic autobiography, is how much he was a man.

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Customer Reviews:

 • Lost For Words
27 September, 2007

After reading this book I believe trying to articulate in writing "what my opinion" is would be doing it an injustice. The man is brilliant and has influenced me to search for more knowledge and wisdom. Thanks Mr. Cleaver!

- Reviewed by customer ID: A32OFZKQ4P0NIV

 • Decent Writer, Bad Man...
11 January, 2007

people consider this to be 'in the world of literature' and serious? cleaver's a misogynistic pig, a racist, and a multiple rapist. that's all you need to know.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A2FOZVHA7922QG

 • Being Honest
10 November, 2008

One must remember, this man is a convict, sent to prison for attempted murder. If you understand the mind of the incarcerated then you know it is all a front for parole. Once Cleaver was released from prison he proceed to get involved with more criminal activity both in the United States and abroad. In France he is suspected of the murder of a man that had an affair with his wife. In Algeria he ran a auto theft ring. Does this sounds like the re-incarnation of Malcolm X. Or does it sound like the a street thug. The fact that he became a crack addicted whore towards the end of his life renouncing the Black Panther attest to the fact that Eldridge Cleaver was a phoney only hustling the system to get out of jail. I read his book and essentially was bored. I had no desire to experience life behind bars as white critics and so-call academics do.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AZHBFHZAEYNIF

 • He Right, Even Now.
01 June, 2007

The themes exhibited in "Soul On Ice" are race, racism, individuality vs. societal standards and traditions, injustice, humanity, religion/faith, inhumanity and activism. Cleaver spends a great deal of time writing on the injustices Black people face in America, and how even though he is what society wants him to be, it is his fault that he allow society to be right. He pledges to take steps towards change and to become a benefit to society. I know that a lot of people think that they know about the civil rights movement and the effects it had on the Black race, but they don't. This story of a man who, at the time, had been locked up for more than half of his life, is the story of all real Black people. I think that sometimes Black people do things and think that it is their nature, which is how stereotypes brew. Cleaver shows us that it is history and hatred that have made us a collective in an usual individual world. We do think for ourselves, yet a racist society continues to force us to travel down a road that we have not set for ourselves, and that he has fell into racist America's trap. He has become the stereotype: (supposedly) uneducated, a prisoner, and a victim of "The Ogre" (the white woman).

- Reviewed by customer ID: A2AY0JN4RA8MUQ

 • Sad, Revolutionary, And Incindiary At The Same Time,
10 September, 2007

Mr. Cleaver wrote a semiautobiography about how society sets itself up along racial and gender lines. Raping women is reprehensible and evil and it doesn't help solve the racial/gender problem. It excabates it. Challenging the racist/sexist society by making alliances with people whom he considered to be his enemies will solve most of the problem. He should have shown love for his fellow man/woman. Didn't Jesus tell people to love your enemies, not hating and violating them? Later on in life, his views have changed for the better.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A2VVOAR8QQIAVS


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