I'm a huge Richard Pryor fan and I'll be shallow and admit that I bought this book years ago solely because he was on the cover. I've passed over it for years but I'm circling the steaming carrion of a novel I want to write about a stand-up comedian so I thought I'd finally give it a whirl.
Let me just say that there is absolutely nothing wrong with this book. I'll explain my personal three-star rating in a moment.
Watkins does a fine job taking us back, pretty much to distant West Africa to show us the roots of the African-American cultural matrix that gets transplanted and transformed once slavery dumped everyone in the New World. He traces with a fine point the evolution of black humor as we know it. And these bits are great. Well-researched, lots of example, and so on. But the bulk of the book covers this more distant historical period. In fact, current black funny people, with the exception of Dick Gregory, kind of get short-thrift. From, say, Cosby and Foxx on, there's only about a hundred pages left for Pryor, Murphy, and the great stuff from the 70s and 80s. Now, I'm find with a historical perspective, and the stuff on minstrelsy, early radio and TV, blackface comics...all that stuff is wonderful and fascinating, but I was really, really looking forward to the contemporary bits. He does go into some detail on Pryor, an American hero in my opinion, but the end is a bit of a rush job. You could write a book just on the 1960s until now, when African-American humor went through all its metamorphoses that gave us what we have today. Alas!
Still, if you're interested in the earlier period, you'll love it.