A Century of African American Art(Updated) The Paul R. Jones Collection by Amalia K. Amaki Paperback, 259 Pages, Published 2004 by Rutgers University Press ISBN-13: 978-0-8135-3457-2, ISBN: 0-8135-3457-7
""Paul Jones is a passionate collector with a very good eye. He [has] sought out very good examples of excellent artists who have played prominent roles in American art."—Lynda Roscoe Hartigan, Chief Curator, Smithsonian American Art MuseumThe Paul R. Jones Collection is one of the oldest, largest, and most comprehensive holdings of African American art in the world. Jones, who was named by Art and Antiques as one of the top one hundred ..."
Tuscaloosa (Images of Modern America) by DrAmalia K. Amaki, Priscilla N. Davis Paperback, 96 Pages, Published 2015 by Arcadia Publishing ISBN-13: 978-1-4671-1436-3, ISBN: 1-4671-1436-7
Babe Ruth,The Bride,The Battle(1st Edition) The Remarkable Life of Paratrooper Lewis P. Fern by Cyndi Todd, Chris Lewis, Dr. AmaliaAmaki Paperback, 190 Pages, Published 2014 by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN-13: 978-1-4996-7692-1, ISBN: 1-4996-7692-1
"It's a life full of twists, turns and rewards. And may never be repeated. Through Clairmont Presbyterian Church in Decatur, Georgia, I became close friends with Marion Fern and her husband Lewis. He began to tell me childhood stories: his several notable years caddying for Babe Ruth, his romantic courtship with a beautiful print ad model and smart nurse, and his multiple adventures in World War II as one of the nation’s first paratroope ..."
"For more than three decades, Amalia Amaki has garnered critical acclaim for works that examine the beauty, music, experience, and contributions of African Americans. This volume brings together her photographs, quilts, souvenir fans, and mixed-media works. Incorporating fabric, beads, pearls, buttons, paint, glitter, and photographs with cultural symbols and visual puns, Amaki challenges and reconfigures American history in original and ..."
"This gathering of sixty images, along with the essays that frame them, gives us a new way to think about the too often troubled status of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs). The bell in the clock tower at Atlanta's Morris Brown College bears an inscription about the ideal of educational access, that it be "without regard to sex, race, or color." Yet most of the Morris Brown campus has lain silent for more than a decade ..."