The Hairstons : An American Family in Black and White
The Hairstons : An American Family in Black and White
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Author(s): Wiencek, Henry
ISBN No.: 9780312253936
Edition: Revised
Pages: 400
Year: 200002
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 38.63
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"One would have to be hard-hearted indeed not to be moved by the big story this book tells . or by the little stories it tells of individual Hairstons whose lives reveal so much about what it is to be an American . It is scrupulous and honest in all respects, and a powerful testament to what this country, at its best, can be." -- Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post Book World " The Hairstons is an epic . Enthralling . creates a profound understanding of slavery, Jim Crow, and the civil rights movement. He uses documents, sometimes centuries old, to bring these Hairstons vividly to life." -- Howard Kissel, New York Daily News "Not since Mary Chestnut's Civil War has nonfiction about the South been as compelling as fiction.


" -- Time "This is a moving and timely story of that which separates and binds black and white America. The Hairstons helps us understand our common past and present." -- Julian Bond "A look at the largest slaveholders in the South and black and white families they spawned. Once they ruled over a pre-Civil War kingdom that spanned 45 plantations spread out over four states and included 10,000 slaves. To keep it all intact, they did what European aristocracy did: they married their own. And as one might imagine, this created a huge and maddeningly complex genealogical configuration, hard to decipher, to say the least. Undaunted, Wiencek, who has written for Smithsonian and American Heritage magazines, has spent eight years unraveling the mystery of the Hairstons (pronounced Harston), said to be 'the largest family in America.' What Wiencek has turned up is nothing if not intriguing, including aspects which are worthy of further exploration .


Amid these huge plantations, for example, are unacknowledged children of their masters who become enslaved butlers, servants, and housekeepers, or children who were forced to keep their mother's maiden name to disguise their heritage. [An] eerily fascinating account." -- Kirkus Reviews "Wiencek's lovingly detailed history of the complicated relationships among the various strains of this huge, tragically divided Old South family has been called a metaphor for the nation, but a more accurate description would lie in the words of Robert Penn Warren, who said, 'The past is never past.'" -- The Dallas Morning News.


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