Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
6 months, 1 week ago

if necessary, he’s the Asian American Community

Like I say, Akagi stays behind to take care of business. After three years Huey gets free, but there’re dead brothers all across the country. Police raids and shootouts in Oakland, Chicago, L.A., and the Marin County Courthouse. Repression, provocation, conspiracy, purges. Head of the Panthers inca…

—p.210 I Hotel 1970: "I" Hotel (193) by Karen Tei Yamashita
You added a note
6 months, 1 week ago

it’s about organize the lumpen

White Russian kid from the Potrero hangs out with Leways like he’s Chinese. Maybe he is. Speaks more Chinese than the ABCs. Friend of RG from his hippy days. Crosses the Broadway/Columbus border daily. Supplies the brothers with sources for quality drugs. Parks his hopped-up ’Cuda on the street and…

—p.208 1970: "I" Hotel (193) by Karen Tei Yamashita
You added a note
6 months, 1 week ago

a fucking chapter of one!

Panthers walk on Sacramento; it’s national news on prime time, and overnight there’s forty-three Black Panther Party chapters nationwide. Telegrams come in daily; this one’s from this place called Reed College, wants to form a chapter.

Huey asks, “Akagi, you’re a college man. What’s this Reed Co…

—p.205 1970: "I" Hotel (193) by Karen Tei Yamashita
You added a note
6 months, 1 week ago

set you straight about the Suzie Wong stereotype

How many Chinatown girlfriends got themselves Panther dates? Whole group of them: Leway Girls. Legitimate Way. Girls cross the bridge to Oakland, and the brothers reciprocate and go Leway. Hang out on Jackson under the shadow of the I-Hotel at their Chinatown pool hall, swapping looks over the soda…

—p.201 1970: "I" Hotel (193) by Karen Tei Yamashita
You added a note
6 months, 1 week ago

the Muslim thing minus the religion plus the politics

But back up, brother. There’s more. So Akagi gets out of the army and takes his G.I. points to college. It’s 1964. Free Speech at Berkeley. Starts reading. Everybody’s reading Marx. What’s this communism he’s been fighting to protect the homeland? Meets up with another old buddy from the days who’s…

—p.199 1970: "I" Hotel (193) by Karen Tei Yamashita