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  • Published: 22 October 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241724194
  • Imprint: Hamish Hamilton
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $36.99

The Message




With his bestseller, Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates established himself as a unique voice in his generation of American authors; a brilliant writer and thinker in the tradition of James Baldwin.

In his keenly anticipated new book, The Message, he explores the urgent question of how our stories – our reporting, imaginative narratives and mythmaking – both expose and distort our realities. Travelling to three resonant sites of conflict, he illuminates how the stories we tell – as well as the ones we don’t – work to shape us.

The first of the book’s three main parts finds Coates on his inaugural trip to Africa – a journey to Dakar, where he finds himself in two places at once: a modern city in Senegal and the ghost-haunted country of his imagination. He then takes readers along with him to Columbia, South Carolina, where he reports on the banning of his own work and the deep roots of a false and fiercely protected American mythology – visibly on display in this capital of the confederacy, with statues of segregationists still looming over its public squares. Finally in Palestine, Coates sees with devastating clarity the tragedy that grows in the clash between the stories we tell and reality on the ground.

Written at a dramatic moment in American and global life, this work from one of the country’s most important writers is about the urgent need to untangle ourselves from the destructive myths that shape our world – and our own souls – and embrace the liberating power of even the most difficult truths.

  • Published: 22 October 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241724194
  • Imprint: Hamish Hamilton
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $36.99

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Praise for The Message

Brilliant and timely . . . Coates presents three blazing essays on race, moral complicity, and a storyteller’s responsibility to the truth. . . . Coates exhorts readers, including students, parents, educators, and journalists, to challenge conventional narratives that can be used to justify ethnic cleansing or camouflage racist policing

Booklist (starred review)

A revelatory meditation on shattering journeys . . . Interweaving autobiography and reportage, Coates examines race, his identity as a Black American, and his role as a public intellectual

Kirkus (starred review)

[A]n earnest and intimate exploration of locations of extreme injustice, and of the power of writing to render a more compassionate—and more honest—future . . . At once a rallying cry and a love letter to writing itself, the book is an urgent reminder that "politics is the art of the possible, but art creates the possible of politics

Oprah Daily

In a series of three sweeping essays that take readers through Senegal, South Carolina, Palestine, and Israel, acclaimed social writer Ta-Nehisi Coates examines the myths that animate and guide us—often at the expense of the truth. The Message marks Coates’ first non-fiction book in nearly a decade, and it arrives at a critical flashpoint in our increasingly globalized society

Harper’s Bazaar

The Message charts Coates’s re-entry as a public intellectual . . . The rolling, elegiac cadences of much of his earlier work have yielded to a fury that’s harder edged. But a sense of shock also seems to have elicited in Coates a sense of possibility . . . [Coates] is using his position of prominence and moral authority to draw attention to the plight of Palestinians. Having lived the life of the famous Black writer in mostly white professional spaces, someone who has been both venerated and vilified, he finds in his new community "the warmth of solidarity." Instead of being the singular voice or the incomparable expert, Coates offers himself as an ally

New York Times Book Review

Ever since his Baldwin-inflected Between the World and Me, Coates has been known for his incisive (and sometimes uncomfortable) cultural and political commentary. Here he journeys from West Africa to the American South to Palestine to examine how the stories we tell can fail us, and to argue that only the truth can bring justice

The Boston Globe
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