Ta-Nehisi Coates
Ta-Nehisi Coates launches the tour for his new book, "We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy," at the Metropolitan AME Church in D.C. on Oct. 9. (E Watson/EDI Photo)

Acclaimed author Ta-Nehisi Coates on Monday launched the tour for his latest book in D.C., delivering bite-size teasers of significant events in the journalistโ€™s life, including his not-so-cordial encounters with the Obama administration.

Set at the historic Metropolitan AME Church in Northwest, where the famous Black activist Frederick Douglass once gave a sermon, the special event gave Coates a platform to discuss his new work, โ€œWe Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy,โ€ and the events that make up the book.

โ€œIn my book, one of the things I talk about is the first time I met then-President Barack Obama,โ€ Coates said. โ€œI had been writing things about President Obama and some of those things were not kind to say the least. โ€ฆ But that was my job and I stand by it. However, one day I received a phone call from the White House. It was a weird number so I didnโ€™t answer it. So they left a message saying, โ€˜This is not a prank, this is the White House, could you come down tomorrow and meet with the president?โ€™

โ€œSo I went down there and it was me and a bunch of other journalists with assigned seating,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd I ended up sitting across from Obama. โ€ฆ So I kind of knew what this was, you know โ€” kind of like, โ€˜say it to my face.โ€™

โ€œSo he comes in and I ask some really weak, moist questions and when Iโ€™m finished he says, โ€˜So I saw what you wrote the other day and I gotta say, it was terribly unfair,โ€ Coates said with a laugh. โ€œHe then proceeds to just go in on me, but I hated [Obamaโ€™s] pull-yourself-up-by-the-bootstrap speeches, you know? โ€ฆ So I left and went home and it was kind of upsetting.โ€

During the rest of Coatesโ€™ monologue, he outlined what transpired after the meeting โ€” and the blunt and controversial words that landed him right back at the White House not long after his first visit, much to the surprise and enjoyment of the audience.

โ€œThis book is definitely a must-read,โ€ said D.C. native Julia James. โ€œCoates is so candid with his words and the book serves as not only a tool for prolific amusement, but also a weapon toward racism and the illumination on the belief that understanding and recognizing Black people is central to understanding any part of America.โ€

The event, sponsored by Sankofa Video and Books and moderated by renowned journalist Kojo Nnamdi, highlighted the overall importance of Black authors.

โ€œI grew up surrounded by Black books, reared by a father who spent much of his adult life either running a bookstore or a publishing company,โ€ Coates said. โ€œI was made, as a writer and as a human, by Black books. Those bookstores that specialize in this literature are sacred. It is, thus, wholly appropriate that I begin my tour with Sankofa.โ€

Lauren Poteat is a versatile writer with a strong background in communications and media experience with an additional background in education and development.

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