Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Nobody Called Me Charlie : The Story of a Radical White Journalist Writing for a Black Newspaper in the Civil Rights Era - Charles Preston

Nobody Called Me Charlie

The Story of a Radical White Journalist Writing for a Black Newspaper in the Civil Rights Era

By: Charles Preston

Hardcover | 3 March 2010

Sorry, we are not able to source the book you are looking for right now.

We did a search for other books with a similar title, however there were no matches. You can try selecting from a similar category, click on the author's name, or use the search box above to find your book.

In the 1940s, at the height of segregation, Charles Preston became the unlikely newest worker at a black owned-and-operated newspaper. Preston, a white man and, unbeknownst to most of his colleagues, a member of the Communist Party, quickly came face to face with issues of race and injustice that would profoundly impact his life and change the way he understood United States society.
This fictionalized account of his experience tells readers what it was like to be the only white worker, and a communist at that, at a black newspaper, while unflinchingly depicting the racism that was so common and accepted in the 1950s. This book draws us into a world few white people knew about, not in a voyeuristic but in a deeply human way. The quotidian elements of daily life&;at work, at home, in the neighborhood&;are described with humor and pathos, but this account rises above mere anecdote. It takes on the central question of this nation's history: can a truly human and humane society be built on a foundation of profound and pervasive racial inequality? Of course, the answer is no.
Yet how do we make such a society? Or put another way, how must white people try to live their lives and how must they connect with their black brothers and sisters, personally and politically, to make a world in which the horrible scars of racism are healed once and for all? The answer that shines through Preston's book&;whether he is writing (and reporting) about work, local politics, the civil rights struggle, housing, education, entertainment,travel, sports, business, child-rearing, friendship, or intimaterelationships&;is that whites must do what he did: give up their whiteness. This is a book you will not forget.

More in Modern & Contemporary Fiction

The Names : 'The best debut novel in years' Sunday Times - Florence Knapp
Between Sisters - Kristin Hannah

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
Good Boy - Michelle Wright

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$21.59

38%
OFF
Mad Mabel - Sally Hepworth

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
Theo of Golden - Allen Levi

RRP $32.99

$18.39

44%
OFF
Pilbara - Judy Nunn

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
A Family Matter - Claire Lynch

RRP $24.99

$19.99

20%
OFF
Yeah the Boys - Holden Sheppard

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$26.99

23%
OFF
Margaret, Are You Leaving? - Dianne Yarwood

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
The Couples Retreat - Mercedes Mercier

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein : A Fiction - Deborah Levy

RRP $42.99

$34.99

19%
OFF
The Other Bennet Sister : TV Tie-in - Janice Hadlow

RRP $26.99

$19.98

26%
OFF
Yesteryear - Caro Claire Burke

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$22.99

34%
OFF
Fruit Fly : 'Savage and darkly hilarious' Juno Dawson - Josh Silver
Capture - Amanda Lohrey

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$26.99

23%
OFF
Mantle - Romy Ash

Paperback

RRP $34.99

$19.99

43%
OFF
The Bookshop of Buried Pasts - Sarah Clutton

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF