Books 1-10. Books 11-20.21.
Hmong and American: Stories of Transition to a Strange Land by Sue Murphy Mote.
22.
Meet Me In the Moon Room by Ray Vukcevich.
23.
Children of Rondo: Transcriptions of Rondo Oral History Interviews edited by Kimberly K. Zielinski.
24.
The Manual of Detection by Jedediah Berry.
25.
The Cowboy and His Elephant by Malcolm MacPherson.
26.
Voices of Rondo: Oral Histories of Saint Paul's Historic Black Community, gathered and edited by Kate Cavett (Hand in Hand Productions).
27. Letters From Attica by
Sam Melville. Can't find a link to an in-print version of this. Not sure what my experience of this book might have been if I hadn't already read
Jane Alpert's book
Growing Up Underground; as it is, nearly a third of this volume is taken up by Alpert's profile of Melville, which she wrote and sent in while in hiding. Melville's letters start as arrogant and ranting--his letters to his then seven-year-old son are particularly hard to read--and the sexism that Alpert talked about is much in evidence. He does become more thoughtful as he is moved from the Tombs and Sing Sing to Attica, where he engages with the other inmates and their attempts to lobby for improved conditions there. I already have Tom Wicker's book A Time To Die for a fuller account of the riots; I hope to get to it in the next few months.