Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > From 1900
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Make Believe - A True Story (Paperback, New edition)
Price: R196
Discovery Miles 1 960
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Make Believe - A True Story (Paperback, New edition)
(2 ratings, sign in to rate)
Price R196
Discovery Miles 1 960
Expected to ship within 2 - 4 working days
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Hakim Jamal (real name Alan Donaldson) was born in Roxbury, a black
district of Boston, in 1933. His father was a drunk, his mother
left when he was six. He started drinking at ten and was using
heroin at fourteen. In his early twenties he spent four years in
prison and was committed to an asylum for two attempted murders. At
twenty-seven he was converted by the teachings of Malcolm X, leader
of the Black Muslim movement, Nation of Islam, and his life
changed. He became an eloquent spokesman for the black urban
underclass in America. He was briefly Jean Seberg's lover. By the
late 1960s Hakim Jamal was living in London with Gale Benson, a
divorcee in her twenties, the daughter of an British MP, who took
the name Hale Kimga. Diana Athill met Hakim Jamal when she edited
his book, From the Dead Level: Malcolm X and Me, published by Andre
Deutsch. Against all odds, they became friends, sometimes lovers.
In Make Believe, originally published in 1993 and out of print for
some years, Diana Athill describes, with her trademark unflinching
honesty, her relationship with Hakim and his milieu, the
devastation wrought on his personality by his background, his
increasingly bizarre behaviour and
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