Approaching old age, Mr. Davis, a retiree, has lived through segregation, civil rights and affirmative action. He has seen Martin Luther King's mountaintop. This man understood what Barack Obama's grandmother was saying when she said, "I am afraid of some black men on the street." Mr. Davis has stated: "Writing this composition has taken much pain away out of me; I rest between sentences completed, between paragraphs written, between chapter ends and between past events. There are decades between my recollections. So much I selectively forgot has resurfaced; I get tired and retire. Then I remember I must not forget how I survived; however, because I am alive and well I must forgive those who would hinder my survival. Yet, I am still Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man." When I am seen, it does not matter how I am dressed, how I speak or if my hair is combed. Often I receive condescending looks." Mr. Davis is a wordsmith of this millennium affected by a fresh genre called hip-hop.
Pecan Perception
Little Black Boy
by Sylvester Davis, Jr.

Pecan Perception
Little Black Boy
by Sylvester Davis, Jr.
Published Jun 24, 2016
311 Pages
6 x 9 Black & White Paperback
Genre: FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / General