HOW I SHED MY SKIN: Unlearning the Racist Lessons of…

HOW I SHED MY SKIN: Unlearning the Racist Lessons of a Southern Childhood. by Grimsley, Jim < >

HOW I SHED MY SKIN: Unlearning the Racist Lessons of a Southern Childhood.

Edition: Advance Reading Copy (trade paperback format. )

Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin Books, (2015). First edition - A moving memoir by this acclaimed novelist - "Grimsley was eleven years old in 1966 when federally mandated integration of schools went into effect in the state and the school in his small eastern North Carolina town was first integrated. Until then, blacks and whites didnt sit next to one another in a public space or eat in the same restaurants, and they certainly didnt go to school together.. . What he did not realize until he began to meet these new students was just how deeply ingrained his own prejudices were and how those prejudices had developed in him despite the fact that prior to starting sixth grade, he had actually never known any black people. Now, more than forty years later, he looks back at that school and those times - remembering his own first real encounters with black children and their culture." Booklist called this "a beautifully written coming-of-age recollection from the era of racial desegregation." 275 pp.

Condition: Fine in illustrated wrappers.

Book ID: 88104
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