Literary Legends 2018

The 2018 Literary Legends Gala celebrated local authors Frankie Y. Bailey and Alice P. Green. The event took place on Saturday, October 20 at 6 PM at the library’s Howe Branch.

 Green (left) and Bailey (right)

Dr. Alice P. Green is well known for her accomplishments in the fields of education, social working and criminology–which she earned three master’s degrees in. She is also an active participant in the community. Not only is she an adjunct professor at the University of Albany, but she is also the founder and Executive Director of the civil rights organization: Center for Law and Justice, founder of the African American Cultural Center of the Capital Region, and was even the Green Party candidate for Lieutenant Governor in 1998 and Albany mayoral candidate in 2005. As for Green’s writing, she mainly focuses on racism and criminal justice issues, both topics rooted in her own activism for African Americans and prison reform. She co-authored two books with Frankie Y. Bailey: Law Never Here: A Social History of African American Responses to Issues of Crime and Justice (1999) and Wicked Albany: Lawlessness & Liquor in the Prohibition Era (2009). Green was recognized for her accomplishments by multiple organizations including the NAACP, Rockefeller College, National Organization for Women, New York State Bar Association,  the University at Albany, the New York Defenders Association, the New York Civil Liberties Union, and many more.

Frankie Y. Bailey is an author to five mystery novels: Death’s Favorite Child (2000), A Dead Man’s Honor (2001), Old Murders (2003), You Should Have Died on Monday (2007), and Forty Acres and a Soggy Grave (2011). She also co-wrote and edited a handful of books and articles in topics of crime, media/pop culture and local history–which are all her main focuses of study. She currently works as a full-time professor in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Albany (SUNY) and is the project director of the Justice and Multiculturalism in the 21st Century project in the School of Criminal Justice at the university. Bailey was awarded the Macavity Award for Best Nonfiction in 2009 for her sole non-fiction novel, African American Mystery Writers: A Historical and Thematic Study (2008).