Surrender, white people! Our unconditional terms for peace

D. L. Hughley, 1963-

Book - 2020

"Following-up his New York Times bestseller How Not to Get Shot, comedy legend D.L. Hughley offers satirical terms for a peace treaty between white America and the rest of humanity"--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Humor
Satire
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
D. L. Hughley, 1963- (author)
Other Authors
Doug (Comedian) Moe (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
241 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9780062953704
9780062953711
  • Introduction Surrender, White People!
  • The Terms of Our Peace Treaty
  • Article I. White People Shall Consider Reparations
  • Article II. History Books Shall be Aligned
  • Article III. We Shall Endeavor to Understand One Another
  • Article IV. We Shall Deal with the White Supremacy Problem
  • Article V. We Shall Be Un-Oppressed
  • Article VI. We Are Part of America
  • Conclusion
  • Signature Page
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Library Journal Review

New York Times best-selling comedian Hughley (How Not To Get Shot) strikes a funny if pointed deal with soon-to-be-minority white America: If white people will stop preventing blacks from voting and will keep their police from killing young black men, blacks won't comment on how white people dance.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The acclaimed comedian announces the terms of surrender that white America must claim for its sins, under threat of being surrounded as the U.S. becomes majority nonwhite. "We're clearly at war," writes Hughley. "When you can get shot in your own house like Botham Jean or Atatiana Jefferson, what else can you call it? All deaths are tragic, but not all of them are surprising. When dudes are on the streets, running afoul of the law, the propensity for something happening is probably exacerbated. But when cops kill two people in their homes, what else can you call it but war?" In his latest, the author offers a simultaneously humorous and serious take on race relations in the wake of a near unprecedented resistance effort to stem fatal police violence. He appoints himself as lead arbiter, "sole agent," seeking cautiously to negotiate a peace treaty that serves to establish a lasting peace between "Black folks and their oppressors." The author effectively combines his outspoken comedic sensibilities with his longtime experience with political commentary (he had his own show on CNN and serves as a correspondent for the network). Neither side leaves the narrative unscathed. Assuredly, white people get it the worst, yet many black readers may call into question what it means to accept "our place in America" if it's built on what Hughley admits is stolen land and wealth. This follows in the spirit of the author's previous book, How Not To Get Shot, as he mixes important statistics and earnest policy reforms with his witty perspective gained from his upbringing in South Central LA and decades of successful comedy tours in front of black and white audiences. Readers will frequently laugh out loud, but there's far more to this couldn't-be-timelier book than just jokes. Prescriptively mild and bitingly comedic. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.