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Bursting with insight and love, this book may well help save us. Her epilogue feels like a prayer for a country in pain, offering new directions through prophetic language. Her reporting is nimble and her sentences exquisite.

But the real power of Caste lies tucked within the stories she strings together like pearls. Caste roams wide and deep, lives and deaths vividly captured, haloed with piercing cultural critique. Caste is a luminous read, bearing its own torch of righteous wrath in a diamond-hard prose that will be admired and studied by future generations of journalists.

Her quest for answers frames everything and acts as the perfect delivery method for every explanation. It deepens the resonance of that book a seemingly impossible feat by digging more explicitly into the pervasive racial hierarchy that transcends region and time.

A significant work of social science, journalism, and history, Caste removes the tenuous language of racial animus and replaces it with a sturdier lexicon based on power relationships.

This is an American reckoning and so it should be. It is a painfully resonant book and could not have come at a more urgent time. Opening up a new bank of language in a time of emboldened white supremacism may provide her readers with a new way of thinking and talking about social injustice.

But Ms. Her book leaves me both grateful and hopeful. I gulped it down. Isabel Wilkerson tells this story in prose that is so beautiful, the only reason to pause your reading is to catch your breath. You cannot understand America today without this book. Start earning points for buying books! Book Gifts for Everyone on Your List.

Add to Bookshelf. Read An Excerpt. Aug 04, ISBN Add to Cart. Buy from Other Retailers:. Audiobook Download. Hardcover —.

Add to Cart Add to Cart. At a meeting of executives at Random House, however, the question came up again and someone remembered this same passage and settled on the very phrase, I had originally identified. My mother, who migrated from Georgia to Washington, D. The question of the title set me on a course of trying to understand just what the sun means to us, what it gives us and what it takes to defy the gravitational pull of your own solar system and take off for another far away.

Richard Wright consciously chose to call the cold North the place of warmer suns. It showed how determined he and millions of others like him were to leave a place that had shunned them for a place they hoped would sustain them, the need of any human being and the gift of any sun. How widespread is the Great Migration?

How many people experienced it? At the start of the twentieth century, ninety percent of all black Americans were living in the South. By the end of the Great Migration, some forty-seven percent were living outside the South.

The children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of these migrants make up the majority of African-Americans in the North and West. Vast as it was, however, the Great Migration is not purely about the numbers but about the lasting effects of so many people uprooting themselves and transporting their culture from an isolated region of the country to the big cities of the North and West.

They brought the music and folkways of the South with them and created a hybrid that has become woven into American life as a whole. How did you find Ida Mae, George, and Robert, and why did you choose to focus on them instead of others you interviewed?

Tell us a bit about your research, and why these three people stood out to you. It took eighteen months of interviews with more than 1, people to find the three protagonists in the book. I interviewed seniors at quilting clubs in Brooklyn, senior centers in Chicago, on bus trips to Las Vegas with seniors from Los Angeles. I went to funerals, libraries, senior dances and the southern state clubs in Los Angeles and Chicago.

Essentially, I went everywhere I could think of that would attract large numbers of black seniors who might have migrated from the South. I went to some of these places enough times that people began to recognize me. I kept running into this one woman at Creole events and at Sunday mass in Los Angeles. The woman had migrated from Monroe, Louisiana.

At a meeting of retired transit workers in Chicago, a woman signed an information sheet I had passed around to gather names of people who had come from Mississippi and Arkansas. She was signing for her mother who had never been a transit worker but had come up from Mississippi. Her mother was Ida Mae. George, the third protagonist, introduced himself after Sunday service at a Baptist Church in Harlem and immediately began telling his story. The goal of the search was to find one person for each of the three streams of the Migration East Coast, Midwest and West Coast through whom to tell the larger story of the entire phenomenon.

They each represent not only different migration streams but different backgrounds, different motivations for leaving, different outcomes and different ways of adjusting to the New World. Together, their lives tell a more complete story of the Migration than has ever been told before.

In the process of telling their stories, what did you discover about why some people thrived in their new circumstances, while others did not? As the stories unfold, many lessons emerge.

One is insight into longevity and what it takes to survive the harshest of lives and come out whole. Another is a redefinition of success and accomplishment. A third is the varying ways migrants adjust to their circumstances, how they learn to make peace with the past, or not and how that adjustment affects their happiness. Each of the three protagonists adjusted to their circumstances in completely different ways.

One turned his back on the South and created a new identity for himself, going as far as to change his name. He never fully found peace. Another moved between worlds, never fully reconciling one with the other.

A third, Ida Mae, took the best of both worlds, never changed from who she was, and was the happiest and lived the longest of all. Could you give us a few examples of well-known people whose lives would have been different, and perhaps would not have been possible, had it not been for the courage of those who left the South?

Some might never have existed because their parents met in the North. Each of them grew up to become among the best in their fields, changed them, really. They were among the first generation of blacks in this country to grow up free and unfettered because of the actions of parents or grandparents who knew it was too late for themselves to truly benefit from the advantages of the north but knew it was not too late for their children. The father was so worried that, as they were packing, he had to steady himself on the shoulders of his nine-year-old son.

From that day forward he was known, not by his birth name, but by the one he had mistakenly acquired — Jesse Owens. Most children of the Great Migration know the basic facts of where their parents came from. When the parents or grandparents left, many left for good. Some had experienced or witnessed violence. Many endured persecution. Go here to help fund the publishing of these books. Go here for books we recommend that are not published by UBM. E-List Sign up for our e-list newsletter and be among the first to receive important announcements from UBM.

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