Marion Barry: The Politics of Race.

AuthorCohen, Jon

Marion Barry: The Politics of Race. Jonathan I. Z. Agronsky. British American Publishing, $21.95. While this book is not a clunker (and it easily could have been, considering how quickly it was written), it succeeds only in the modest goal of recounting Barry's rise and fall-a swell, if overly familiar, story. The shy son of a Mississippi maid abandons his chemistry career to join the civil rights movement, perfects the mau-mauing of whites, exchanges his dashiki for a pin-striped suit, and then scratches backs (and stabs them) to become one of America's most powerful mayors. Now tell me something I don't know. Tell me what made Barry run.

When it comes to Barry the man, Agronsky-like the rest of us-is at a loss to explain fully the power, the charisma, the fundamental detachment. Nevertheless, he does accumulate a remarkable catalog of Barry's callousness toward the public he was elected to serve. Some highlights: * Hazel "Rasheeda" Moore, the paramour used to lure Barry into the Vista sting, submitted a proposal for a $47,000 city contract months late yet had it approved within days. * Barry once threatened to cut funding of the contract unless Moore gave him a blow job. * Restaurateur Hassan Mohammadi and attorney Lloyd Moore...

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