In The Reckoning , Randall Robinson examines the crime and poverty that grips much of urban America and urges black Americans to speak out and reach back to ensure their social and economic success in this country. With insight, compassion, and unflinching honesty, Robinson explores the twin blights of crime and poverty—the former often a symptom of the latter—and asks questions that are critical to the rebuilding of black How do we create awareness of the heroic efforts already being made and how can we bring our troubled youth to safety? A product of Robinson’s work with gang members, ex-convicts, and others who have been scarred by the harshness of life in our inner cities, The Reckoning is certain to be as important and controversial as his earlier books.
“The Reckoning,” by Randall Robinson, examines how social conditions, such as crime and poverty, affect Black people in the United States. The majority of the book focuses on Peewee Kirkland, but Robinson also offers insight into the relationship between the past abuses and injustices: enslavement, de jure and de facto discrimination, classism, and the contemporary— such as harsh sentencing, mass incarceration, and many other adversities.
Clearly written for (and probably consumed by) a niche audience, yet this book spoke to me at a time during my adolescence. The ides espoused by Robinson range from the practical to the fantastical, but this text provides an interesting counterpoint to the lens through which most mainstream media portrays the news. Focusing on issues of the African and African-American diaspora, Randall Robinson opens a passage of thought dealing with how to alternatively digest and see the world and it's many struggles.
I read this book after I read Robinson's "The Debt" (which I thought was great). The Reckoning was written before The Debt, and you can see that many of the arguments that he formulates well in the latter book are not fully developed in the former. As a result, his arguments are not as powerful or convincing. If you are in to the topic of African American history, slavery, etc. I'd skip this book and go straight to The Debt.