"I feel battered by culture shock — an experience that has mainly served to teach me how little I know, and how much I have falsely assumed"
Originally published January 22, 1979
“What made 147th Street so bad was the kids. They had all grown up right in the neighborhood; now they were killing it, and each other.”
Originally published January 15, 1979
"Jeddy Gates was that increasingly rare phenomenon in American life — a legend who has not become a celebrity"
Originally published January 8, 1979
“They were in Harlem because they were the toughest guys the department could find, and it appeared that if anyone could take care of themselves, and me as well, it would be the people in Sixth Homicide.”
Originally published January 2, 1979
“When I actually made myself look at Harlem, what I saw was so bizarre that, even with the help of those homicide detectives, I found it bewildering — another country, another planet.”
Originally published December 25, 1978
“If anyone had told me in 1969 that George Clinton and Al Green would be two of my three favorite rock and rollers of the ’70s my only response would have been ‘Who?’ Which is why I’m not going to try and foretell the future now.”
Originally published December 17, 1979
“Maybe the best that can be said of jazz in the ’70s is that it didn’t just survive. It established its own precedents and raised important questions about an art that was finally pushed beyond its golden age.”
Originally published December 17, 1979