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Drawing on never-before-seen material, this definitive biography exposes the true extent of the Jackson family's dysfunctionality -- evidence of which is still in the public eye as they dispute the star's will Jackson was the most talented, richest, and most famous pop star on the planet. But the outpouring of emotion that followed his loss was bittersweet. Dogged by scandal for over fifteen years, and undone by his own tendency to trust the wrong people, Jackson had become untouchable in many quarters, a fact that wounded him deeply. Now, drawing on unprecedented access to friends, enemies, employees, and associates of Jackson, Randall Sullivan delivers an intimate, unflinching, and deeply human portrait of a man who was never quite understood by the media, his fans, or even those closest to him. Untouchable promises to be a profound investigation into the enigma that was Michael Jackson.
The weekly source of African American political and entertainment news.
After Hurricane Katrina, the Hawthorne family moves up north to Lees, New Hampshire. Their next-door neighbor, Mrs. Bessie Quitman, suggests using Steve Hardwick for their lawn service. Unbeknownst to the family, he is a serial killer of Ted Bundy. After the Hawthornes murders, Sarah Langcaster moved to Lees, New Hampshire, to set up Simplicity Gift and Flower Shop with her older sister, Aerial Langcaster. Does she have enough time to stop serial killer Steve Hardwick from murdering her?
Deborah Derben's discovery of her great-grandfather's handwritten memoir about his late 1930s experience in the mysterious New Mexico cavern prompted her to embark on a journey of discovery that wedded her boyfriend's studies in Mali with old family strories, his employer's Middle Eastern heritage, and their academic colleague's Mexican studies to explain why they and certain other humans enjoy immunity from the predations of the underground creatures that have tormented mankind from the beginning of time, and why it falls to Deborah, her lover, and their colleagues to restore the soul of mankind.
The weekly source of African American political and entertainment news.
The first biography of Jackson Barnett, who gained unexpected wealth from oil found on his property. This book explores how control of his fortune was violently contested by his guardian, the state of Oklahoma, the Baptist Church, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and an adventuress who kidnapped and married him. Coming into national prominence as a case of Bureau of Indian Affairs mismanagement of Indian property, the litigation over Barnett's wealth lasted two decades and stimulated Congress to make long-overdue reforms in its policies towards Indians. Highlighting the paradoxical role played by the federal government as both purported protector and pilferer of Indian money, and replete with many of the major agents in twentieth-century Native American history, this remarkable story is not only captivating in its own right but highly symbolic of America's diseased and corrupt national Indian policy. The World's Richest Indian was the winner of the Sierra Prize of the Western Association of Women Historians.
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Profiles notable African Americans from abolitionists and activists to popular artists and politicians.