About Black Women, My Grandmother Told Me

Worthy Advice for Future Generations

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Pub Date 31 Jan 2019 | Archive Date 24 Feb 2019

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Description

Having lived with his grandparents and uncles will delve his inborn wisdom and the sense of humanity’s protection in priority. In this title “About Black Women, My Grandmother Told Me”, the author unrolls his literary style as deep, derider and sober. Narcisse Nguema observed the man’s and the woman’s misbehaviors and started to heed his grandmother’s anecdotal concerns and alerts: The Black societies need to better target their requirements for a strong society. Black people need to reframe their struggle and recover their authenticity and better build wealth and defend their lives at first. The refusal of corruption of minds from white and yellow people along with the appetite for the easiness, regarding women and young people, is the second frame of this project.

After having committed “Proven Mother’s Heart” in French, written as He was 22 years-old, Narcisse Nguema found lots to say about women. But He couldn’t add independent and free thoughts in that first complete novel written in a scenography, and still unshared to the public. He figures out that black folks are in serious harmful danger of all aspects. To fix that state of things, the black woman’s standards of education and behavior must be reset to re-empower the black communities, wherever they are—according to the ancestry insight and to the natural growth of the society, they live at.

Having lived with his grandparents and uncles will delve his inborn wisdom and the sense of humanity’s protection in priority. In this title “About Black Women, My Grandmother Told Me”, the author...


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ISBN 9781977204165
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Featured Reviews

This book is a manifesto and a plan on Improving the African and African American Society from within, the author suggests we do so by :
1. Begin with our relationships with each other male and female to enter a respectful way of life to build a Black Society.
2. Black societies need to better target their requirements for a strong society.
3. Black people need to reframe their struggle and recover their authenticity and better build wealth and defend their lives at first.
4. To fix that state of things, the black woman's standards of education and behavior must be reset to re-empower the black communities, wherever they are. He attests that Women are the cultivators of building and educating society.
5. This author's philosophy closely related to Frantz Fannon’s writings of:
“Dying Colonialism”, and “Towards an African Revolution.”

This book is insightful, scholarly, full of meaningful antidotes!
If one wants to take a closer look at where African African Americans Societies are, and how they can move forward from an ancestral point of view, this is the book for you!

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