For Books by ASALH
Members, Visit the
ASALH Bookshelf!
The ASALH Bookstore is dedicated to offering you a wide
selection of African American literature, scholarly works,
DVDs, and more.  Feel free to browse the titles we have to
offer.  
The Mis-Education of the Negro
By Dr. Carter G. Woodson
Reflections on Carter G. Woodson
With Drs. John Hope Franklin and Adelaide M.
Cromwell
ASALH
Bookstore
ISBN: 0-9768111-0-3
ASALH is proud to offer
for sale a DVD of
Professors John Hope
Franklin and Adelaide M.
Cromwell reflecting on
the life and times of
Carter G. Woodson.  
Filmed at ASALH's 91st
annual conference, the
nearly 2 hour recording
provides not only insight
on the life of Woodson,
but also on their own
lives in the 1930's and
1940's.    For more
information, please click
on the image.
The ASALH Website is a project of the ASALH Publication Committee, Daryl Michael Scott, Chair.  

Direct comments to
phughes@asalh.net

The Association for the Study of African American Life and History
C.B. Powell Building, Suite C-142
525 Bryant Street, NW
Washington, DC 20059

Phone: 202-865-0053
Fax: 202-265-7920

Page revised 09/05/2008
Originally published in
1933,
The Mis-Education
of the Negro
is back thanks
to the ASALH Press.  With
a foreward by V.P.
Franklin, editor of the
Journal of African
American History
, this
edition of the seminal work
of Dr. Woodson is great for
classroom discussion and
personal enjoyment alike.  
Special rates are availalbe
for bulk orders.  Please
contact ASALH for more
information at
202-865-0053.
Talking Animals
By Wilfrid Dyson Hambly
W.E.B. Du Bois
By David Levering Lewis
A collection of short
stories for children,
Talking Animals was
first published in 1949
and has been in
demand ever since.  
Now available through
The Associated
Publishers, this book
will entertain young
ones for hours with
tales such as "Tortoise
and Hare in Love with
Squirrel" and "How
Baboon Lost His Tail."
"In this final magisterial
volume, fifteen years in
the research and writing,
David Levering Lewis
stunningly re-creates the
second half of W.E.B.
Du Bois's charged and
brilliant career.  
Beginning with the return
of World War I
African-American
veterans to the riots and
lynchings of the "Red
Summer" of 1919 and
ending with Du Bois's
self-imposed exile and
death in Ghana forty-four
years later, Lewis charts
the dramatic evolution of
the premier architect of
the civil rights movement
and of the movement
itself."
For Wholesale Rates,
click here.
Founders of Black History Month
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