A compelling and vivid portrait of a Deep South community poised between the past and the future, this is the stunning true story of how a young New York writer plunged into a closed Mississippi society, and what happened when he came out on the other side. Fresh out of the Ivy League, New Yorker Richard Rubin answers a help-wanted ad for a journalist and suddenly finds himself thrust into the center of Greenwood, Mississippi, an old Delta town just beginning to submit to the realities of life in modern America. To Rubin's great surprise, Greenwood embraces him as he sets out to cover its many stories; soon, to his much greater surprise, he embraces Greenwood too, adapting so well that he even becomes a fervent booster of the local high school's football team. While covering that team, he meets Handy Campbell, its star seventeen-year-old quarterback, a poor, unknown black kid from the projects who had never played on any team before his senior year. But Handy is also the greatest natural talent anyone can recall, and by the end of the season, he has won unimaginable glory. Rubin comes to believe that their careers will somehow rise together -- the cub reporter and his prize scoop -- in Greenwood and beyond. But Greenwood's welcoming face hides darker secrets, and ultimately Rubin must leave it in order to preserve his own sense of right and wrong. As he departs, he is at least comforted by the knowledge that Handy Campbell will also be leaving Greenwood, bound for a powerhouse college football program that regularly sends its players to the NFL. Six years later, Rubin is back in New York when he learns that Handy Campbell is not in the NFL but in Greenwood once again, charged with murdering a good friend. Rubin returns south to cover the trial and trace the trail that took Handy from Mississippi State University to the Leflore County Jail -- including, he discovers, the sinister sabotaging of his erstwhile prize scoop's football career. In the process, Rubin is forced to confront his own unresolved feelings about Greenwood, as the best and worst elements of the town rise up once again, starker than ever, to do battle over one man's fate. Rubin's narrative, populated with a gallery of unforgettable characters, leads readers through a series of fascinating stories, suspense-laced revelations, and startling plot twists. Bold and beautifully written, Confederacy of Silence is a rare glimpse at how differently a small town regards two outsiders in its midst, and a tale of how all three of them are changed forever by the dawning of the New Old South.
Collected over ten years, presents interviews with the last remaining World War I veterans, aged 101 to 113, to paint a picture of a time and a generation that, despite memorials and history lessons, is quickly fading away.
Harry Scott['s] runaway, came one night with Orange to my house. [Two or more names scratched out] Alfred wanted me to join him — I told him it was impossible. I talked to no one on the place. Simon [Dunbar]. I heard Orange.
Carpenter, Jim, and Daniel Schaffer. Tennessee's Iron Industry Revisited: The Stewart County Story, Golden Pond, KY: Land Between the Lakes Association, n.d. Cooling, Benjamin Franklin. National Parks Civil War Series: The Campaign for ...
One American Time-Traveler, 100 Years Since the Great War, 500 Miles of Battle-Scarred French Countryside, and Too Many Trenches, ... even a very rare one of the crown prince's secret French mistress. if you return to the area sometime, ...
From the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award-winning history A Stillness at Appomattox, an electrifying account of the end of the Civil War—Grant and Lee’s final maneuvers as four years of internecine conflict inched to a close. ...
Thus the converging ambitions of the Union and the Confederacy are brought into sharp focus in this towering tale of the first few weeks of the Civil War.
... 133–52, 304n51, 306n66; role in Kirmess, 304n44 Conner, Richard Ellis, 81 Conner, William C., 271 Cosey, Debbie, ... W. E. B., 36,145 Dunbar, Annie, 259 Dunbar, Mary Conway, 42 Duncan, Annie Rose Quitman, 27, 42 Duncan, Stephen, ...
From there he paid a man named Godfrey Hyams to take the trunks and sell the contents. Hyams sold some of the trunks in Washington, DC, and the others in Union-occupied New Bern, North Carolina. What Blackburn and others did not know at ...
Illuminating a frequently neglected but extremely significant side of military history, "Intimate Strategies" is a rare and fascinating look at a critical aspect of Civil War commanders' lives--their marriages.
In these masterful essays drawn from his New York Times bestsellers A History of the American People and Heroes, one of the world's most renowned and respected historians explores what is arguably the most important chapter in the annals of ...