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Rating:  Summary: a class guy Review: I bought this book and about a week later found out that tobie gene and sonny barger were going to be at the oakland,ca harley davidson signing books it truly was a pleasure meeting those two I had seen them many times before and they both signed soul on bikes, and dead in 5 heartbeats. The book was very good having grown up in oakland many times I heard the dragons roaring down the streets on their harleys. Soul on bikes is amazing and talks about him growing up and forming first a car club, and later a motorcycle club. So many people when they saw my book simply focused on the negative like the problems the dragons had with some drug dealers, which was talked about in the book briefly, (and to me just enough) but it was good to read about the positives of motorcycle clubs and how it changed some peoples lives for the better. A truly good read.
Rating:  Summary: Black Motorcycles Clubs Were a Part of Bay Area History Review: I must admit I had very little knowledge nor contact with bikers or motorcycle clubs. I had heard of The East Bay Dragons, founded in Oakland and of course, everyone knew the Hell's Angels. Both were synonymous with danger and bad news in my sheltered existence. Their rough manner and their reputation of being bad asses was reason to avoid them. So, it was with great surprise while reading Soul on Bikes: The East Bay Dragons MC and the Black Biker Set, Marcus Book Store's April book club Selection, to find out that the East Bay Dragons is an integral part of Oakland history. Tobie Gene Levingston and his family were a part of the northern migration to the East Bay from the southern states in the 1950s; his family being from rural Louisiana. Enticed by the burgeoning factories and other labor jobs and longing to escape the drudgery and endless, vicious cycle of sharecropping that so many black families had succumbed to as a legacy of slavery, California offered new beginnings towards a brighter future. Levingston, then in his early twenties began working in an iron foundry. The work was dirty and back breaking but it enabled him to contribute to his family finances and indulge in some luxuries; one of those being cars. He formed a car club but his group ran into some trouble with the local police and as a result disbanded. Not long after that, Levingston became interested in motorcycles and formed The East Bay Dragons, a black motorcycle club that is active to this day. Because of the problems he had with the car club, Levingston was determined to keep the MC on the straight and narrow. But as this was a group of young black men, just the sight of them on their bikes, raised fear and ire to other residents and law enforcement agencies. There was rivalry with other MCs, white as well as black. There was the political climate of Oakland with racism and later the Black Panther movement. And there were the drugs. Oakland was rampant with drug trade and all the vices that went along with it did not escape some members of the East Bay Dragons. Though Levingston was the heart and moral pulse of the group, he could not control actions of every member. As a result, there were some violent clashes with the police and other MCs. This book was a historical walk though Oakland and surrounding cities. Streets and locales that are familiar to this Oakland raised reviewer were prevalent all through the manuscript. Blues and prostitution on Seventh Street, East and West Oakland neighborhood haunts, and the evolution of blacks coming of age in a city that until the mid-60s was run by whites. Myths about the East Bay Dragons were debunked; these are fellows with families, jobs, with kids in college, who pay taxes and are home and business owners. Such movies as the Biker Boys with Lawrence Fishburn have brought to light that men and women from all walks of life are in the biker community. I was surprised to learn that Levingston and Sonny Barger of the Hell's Angels were good friends with a history that goes way back. They have much respect for each other (Barger writes the foreword to the book) and the animosity between the two MCs were minimal. The Marcus Bookstore Book Club had our book club discussion and Mr. Levingston along with other members of the East Bay Dragons and the Oakland Invaders, another MC club were invited. It was a sight to behold as they roared down Martin Luther King Boulevard and parked their beautiful bikes along the street outside of the bookstore. Bold, black and bad. Dera Williams Marcus Book Club APOOO BookClub
Rating:  Summary: a class guy Review: I was born and raised in Mississippi and can relate to most of Tobie's past. Soul on Bikes is very interesting reading.
Rating:  Summary: Great reading Review: I was born and raised in Mississippi and can relate to most of Tobie's past. Soul on Bikes is very interesting reading.
Rating:  Summary: A different side of the biker scene Review: I've ridden with black bikers for over 30 years, but until I attended the Roundup a few years back I had no idea about the whole club culture in the black biker world. It's the most exciting, vibrant scene in all of motorcycling. These cats are cool. And Tobie Gene is the coolest of them all. He's also a great writer. Combine a great writer with a great story about a great part of American culture, you get a great book. If you don't read any other book this year, you should read this one.
Rating:  Summary: WOW on Bikes Review: Soul On Bikes is a terrific story and even better read. Tobie Gene provides an interesting perspective on the Old South and the rise of Blacks in America. Along the way beatnicks, hippies, urban revolutionaries, Hells Angels, and other counterculture segments of society are respectfully given proper narriative. Most of all, the real reason to read this book is fun. Words fly off the pages faster than a chopped Harley. Every page reveals yet more interesting details about bike riders and their clubs. As a society open only to Blacks and Harley riders, the East Bay Dragons M.C. has maintained its status as one of our nation's oldest, most formidable organizations. Here's the real test: I haven't riden in more than 30 years since the last time I put a bike down in traffic and thought it was the end. I'm white and from the east coast. There aren't too many similarities on the surface between the Dragons and me. Nonetheless, as the book unfolds I can wholly identify with the spirit of the Dragons without having to stretch my imagination. That's what I call an engaging book.
Rating:  Summary: very interesting perspective Review: The book was certainly what I expected. I am glad to have been acquainted with another angle about the one percenters. I like the book mostly because of its insight into the 60s counterculture that the writer tells us about. I really enjoyed the colorful and descriptive story about Haight-Ashbury and the Flower Children. There are many like this throughout this book. He's also very honest and down to earth. Very easy to understand and sometimes easy to relate to. Highly recommended.
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