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Faith Reidenbach
Sep 30, 2010 rated it it was amazing
Six hundred pages that fly by, America history written as creative nonfiction by a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. Winner of the 2010 National Book Critics Circle Award for General Nonfiction. Named to multiple Best of 2010 lists, including: The New York Times, The Economist, The New Yorker, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Chicago Tribune, Newsday, The Christian Science Monitor, USA Today, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, The Seattle Ti ...more
Maryc
4.5 stars This is another important book that all Americans should read. Similar to Michelle Alexander's "The New Jim Crow" it is a mind opening look at Jim Crow America (north and south) and the outrageous, overt, and violent discrimination that we perpetrated on black Americans which contributed to a mass migration from south to north and west during the 1900's, tapering off in the 70's following the civil rights movement. It follows three individuals which gives you a beautiful and personal c ...more
Jenny Yates
I highly recommend this book. Its scope is both vast and intimate, not an easy trick to pull off. It’s the 55-year history of African-American migration, from the South to the North. It’s an amazing sociological phenomenon, and Wilkerson draws the bigger picture with an understanding of how this enormous movement – six million people – affected the politics and culture of the times. At the same time, she traces three particular migrants through their lives, and so we get a lot of very small but ...more
Allison
May 14, 2012 rated it really liked it
Fantastic and fascinating book. I highly recommend it. Blasts away many myths about the African Americans who migrated from the South to the North and West -- they were better educated, more intact families, higher employment rates. The segregation and discrimination faced when they arrived in Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, New York seem to have hit the generation born in those cities very hard. The story is told by following 3 individuals who made the trip in 3 different decades/eras -- so this ...more
Kat
Apr 21, 2018 rated it it was amazing
It is so important to Read this book! Fill in some of the gaps in your US history education.
Daniel Mcgregor
Feb 16, 2017 rated it really liked it
This book was surprisingly moving. The aim, tell the tale of three individuals who never met nor had much in common outside their point of origin (the south) and their destination (the North) seem to me a task that would fall hopelessly short. It did not. The book does drag. The middle especially seems to get lost in details. Three stories do a good job of relating the wide range of experiences, poor, middle class and upper class educated African-Americans went through during the migration. And ...more
Kathy Bochonko
Dec 08, 2020 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Megan
Mar 21, 2012 marked it as to-read
Shay
May 24, 2017 rated it it was amazing
Katie
Sep 06, 2014 rated it it was amazing
Megan Henry
Sep 06, 2014 rated it it was amazing
Erica
Oct 11, 2014 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Leah
Dec 16, 2014 marked it as to-read
Anna
Mar 15, 2015 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Nicole
Sep 15, 2015 marked it as to-read
Eileen
Aug 22, 2016 marked it as to-read
Sheryl
Oct 28, 2016 marked it as to-read
Marlo
Nov 09, 2016 marked it as to-read
Awallens
Dec 28, 2016 marked it as to-read
Tracy
Jan 22, 2017 marked it as to-read
April Parsons
Feb 02, 2017 marked it as to-read
Kim
Feb 23, 2017 marked it as to-read
David
Jul 25, 2017 marked it as to-read
Shelves: social, history
Kim
Mar 19, 2025 rated it liked it
Shelves: blackauthor
Erin
Mar 21, 2018 marked it as to-read
Mo
May 11, 2019 added it
Shelves: nonfiction
Antje
May 23, 2020 marked it as to-read
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