The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration
T**.
So much I Didn't Know
This book is a true education, for me. I had never heard of the Great Migration. The life stories written about in this book are rich and interesting. Not always easy to read but reality isn't always pretty. I saw a Facebook post by RuPaul recommending this book and I am so glad that he did so. Our history lessons certainly did not delve into this part of our American story. The author had a wonderful writing style.
S**R
Historic masterpiece! Well done!
This book is a meticulously researched saga of the Great Migration of African Americans in the Jim Crow South to the West and North. The narrative follows three brave individuals on their journeys. It is a amazing achievement about real heros, packed with raw history.I'm at a loss as to how to write a review worthy of this masterpiece. Ms. Wilkerson's exemplary storytelling and years of interviews and research and her own history come together to tell this incredible story. She writes about the best and worst of humanity from punishing lynchings to unyielding courage and perseverence of the oppressed.Here are a few of the many passages that stayed with me."A series of unpredictable events and frustrations led to the decisions of Ida Mae Gladney, George Swanson Starling, and Robert Pershing Foster to leave the South for good. Their decisions were separate and distinct from anything in the outside world except that they were joining a road already plied decades before by people as discontented as themselves. A thousand hurts and killed wishes led to a final determination by each fed-up individual on the verge of departure, which, added to millions of others, made up what could be called a migration.""Any migration takes some measure of energy, planning, and forethought. It requires not only the desire for something better but the willingness to act on that desire to achieve it. Thus the people who undertake such a journey are more likely to be either among the better educated of their homes of origin or those most motivated to make it in the New World, researchers have found.""Contrary to modern-day assumptions, for much of the history of the United States—from the Draft Riots of the 1860s to the violence over desegregation a century later—riots were often carried out by disaffected whites against groups perceived as threats to their survival. Thus riots would become to the North what lynchings were to the South, each a display of uncontained rage by put-upon people directed toward the scapegoats of their condition. Nearly every big northern city experienced one or more during the twentieth century. Each outbreak pitted two groups that had more in common with each other than either of them realized. Both sides were made up of rural and small-town people who had traveled far in search of the American Dream, both relegated to the worst jobs by industrialists who pitted one group against the other. Each side was struggling to raise its families in a cold, fast, alien place far from their homelands and looked down upon by the earlier, more sophisticated arrivals. They were essentially the same people except for the color of their skin, and many of them arrived into these anonymous receiving stations at around the same time, one set against the other and unable to see the commonality of their mutual plight."In the following, Robert Pershing Foster tries to get a hotel room to rest in New Mexico on his long drive to California:"He replayed the rejections in his mind as he drove the few yards to the next motel. Maybe he hadn’t explained himself well enough. Maybe it wasn’t clear how far he had driven. Maybe he should let them know he saw through them, after all those years in the South. He always prepared a script when he spoke to a white person. Now he debated with himself as to what he should say.He didn’t want to make a case of it. He never intended to march over Jim Crow or try to integrate anybody’s motel. He didn’t like being where he wasn’t wanted. And yet here he was, needing something he couldn’t have. He debated whether he should speak his mind, protect himself from rejection, say it before they could say it. He approached the next exchange as if it were a job interview. Years later he would practically refer to it as such. He rehearsed his delivery and tightened his lines. “It would have been opening-night jitters if it was theater,” he would later say.He pulled into the lot. There was nobody out there but him, and he was the only one driving up to get a room. He walked inside. His voice was about to break as he made his case.“I’m looking for a room,” he began. “Now, if it’s your policy not to rent to colored people, let me know now so I don’t keep getting insulted.” A white woman in her fifties stood on the other side of the front desk. She had a kind face, and he found it reassuring. And so he continued.“It’s a shame that they would do a person like this,” he said. “I’m no robber. I’ve got no weapons. I’m not a thief. I’m a medical doctor. I’m a captain that just left Austria, which was Salzburg. And the German Army was just outside of Vienna. If there had been a conflict, I would have been protecting you. I would not do people the way I’ve been treated here.”It was the most he’d gotten to say all night, and so he went on with his delivery more determinedly than before. “I have money to pay for my services,” he said. “Now, if you don’t rent to colored people, let me know so I can go on to California. This is inhuman. I’m a menace to anybody driving. I’m a menace to myself and to the public, driving as tired as I am.”She listened, and she let him make his case. She didn’t talk about mistaken vacancy signs or just-rented rooms. She didn’t cut him off. She listened, and that gave him hope.“One minute, Doctor,” she said, turning and heading toward a back office.His heart raced as he watched her walk to the back. He could see her consulting with a man through the glass window facing the front desk, deciding in that instant his fate and his worth. They discussed it for some time and came out together. The husband did the talking. He had a kind, sad face. Robert held his breath. “We’re from Illinois,” the husband said. “We don’t share the opinion of the people in this area. But if we take you in, the rest of the motel owners will ostracize us. We just can’t do it. I’m sorry.”Wilkerson wrote this about Harlem and the Harlem Renaissance:“The basic collapse of all organized efforts to exclude Negroes from Harlem was the inability of any group to gain total and unified support of all white property owners in the neighborhood,” Osofsky wrote. “Landlords forming associations by blocks had a difficult time keeping people on individual streets united.”The free-spirited individualism of immigrants and newcomers seeking their fortune in the biggest city in the country thus worked to the benefit of colored people needing housing in Harlem. It opened up a place that surely would have remained closed in the straitjacketed culture of the South.By the 1940s, when George Starling arrived, Harlem was a mature and well-established capital of black cultural life, having peaked with the Harlem Renaissance, plunged into Depression after the 1929 stock market crash, climbed back to life during World War II, and, unbeknownst to the thousands still arriving from Florida, the Carolinas, Georgia, and Virginia, not to mention Jamaica and the rest of the Caribbean when George got there, was at that precise moment as rollickingly magical as it was ever likely to be.Seventh Avenue was the Champs-Élysées, a boulevard wide and ready for any excuse for a parade, whether the marches of the minister Father Divine or several thousand Elks in their capes and batons, and, on Sunday afternoons, the singular spectacle called The Stroll. It was where the people who had been laundresses, bellmen, and mill hands in the South dressed up as they saw themselves to be—the men in frock coats and monocles, the women in fox stoles and bonnets with ostrich feathers, the “servants of the rich Park and Fifth Avenue families” wearing “hand-me-downs from their employers,” all meant to evoke startled whispers from the crowd on the sidewalk: “My Gawd, did you see that hat?”Virtually every black luminary was living within blocks of the others in the elevator buildings and lace-curtained brownstones up on Sugar Hill, from Langston Hughes to Thurgood Marshall to Paul Robeson, Duke Ellington, and W. E. B. Du Bois, on and off, to Richard Wright, who had now outgrown even Chicago, and his friend and protégé Ralph Ellison, who actually lived in Washington Heights but said it was close enough to be Harlem and pretty much considered it so."If I were to approach reading this book again for the first time, I would slow down and savor it. I might expect to read it over a period of several months instead of over a week as I did. There is so much to take in. I rushed it.
T**N
should be required read for all
Isabel Wilkerson is such an amazing author! Her in depth research is written clearly and concise weaving the stories of those she spoke to with factual events and their life experiences. She shows the strength and resilience of real people trying to make a better life for themselves and family. This book should be required reading in our schools. We can all learn from this book.
E**A
Loved this from the cover to cover
If I could give a prize to the best book cover I would award it to Isabel Wilkerson for The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration - from the perfect photo rendering and font art, to the evocative title (tying the Hubble space discovery to the enlightenment of America's black population) and its oh so apt subtitle.Like Barbara Demick's Nothing to Envy (North Korea), and Adrian Nicole LeBlanc's Random Family (incarceration in the Bronx), Isabel Wilkerson has taken a huge, unwieldy topic and created a brilliantly cohesive, organized account that is entertaining to read and leaves one feeling educated on the subject. All three of these writer/authors have accomplished their masterpieces by figuring out just the right handful of intriguing subjects to focus on, and then researching them so thoroughly that the reader actually comes to feel they've known each of these individuals and can thus understand the ordeals that they've been through.There was some repetition of details that I felt could have been edited out, but then I suppose if I hadn't had the time to get through this 500+ page book so quickly that level of reinforcement would probably have been appreciated. My only remaining criticism is that mid-way through the book Wilkerson introduces a family of Blye Brothers, associated with George Swanson Starling; teases and then dismisses the reader by mentioning "their sisters who were all given masculine names, but then that's another story". I hope she wastes no time in coming out with that story!
T**V
Tremendous insights into recent American history and current events
This book is an exceptionally well done treatment of Black migration from the South to the North and the West, well written and well documented.
A**R
informativo
Bastante informação sobre a história da divisão de brancos e negros dos estados unidos. Uma obra de leitura obrigatória para entender a divisão e segregação do país
G**S
An open door into a world no one teaches us about.
A well written book that chronicles three stories from the Great Migration covering 6 decades.Wilkerson's own parents were part of that migration and her studying of it has been a lifetime pursuit. This book follows the story of three migrants. Each from a different part of the south and each with a different destination. Wilkerson's storytelling is fantastic as she builds the story of each interspersed with facts and history of Jim Crow and the national effects of the migration on Northern cities.The migration of freed black men and women is pivotal to how the United States is today. Despite that, this history is largely ignored for what might seem to be racial and political reasons.If you are looking to understand black history in the American' 20th century, you would hard pressed to find better.
F**Z
Excellent book
Excellent, well researched book. Reads like a novel!
H**R
Excellent Read
The history lesson never taught in schools! Well written with real accounts of what happened in Jim Crow law. A must read!
B**T
Excellent book on pain and plight of migration
A must for read holistic persons
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