
Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Hardcover)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Available in eBook | $12.59 |
A powerful story about race and identity told through the lives of one American family across three generations
In 1914, in defiance of his middle-class landowning family, a young white man named James Morgan Richardson married a light-skinned black woman named Edna Howell. Over more than twenty years of marriage, they formed a strong family and built a house at the end of a winding sandy road in South Alabama, a place where their safety from the hostile world around them was assured, and where they developed a unique racial and cultural identity. Jim and Edna Richardson were Ralph Eubanks's grandparents.
Part personal journey, part cultural biography, The House at the End of the Road examines a little-known piece of this country's past: interracial families that survived and prevailed despite Jim Crow laws, including those prohibiting mixed-race marriage. As he did in his acclaimed 2003 memoir, Ever Is a Long Time, Eubanks uses interviews, oral history, and archival research to tell a story about race in American life that few readers have experienced. Using the Richardson family as a microcosm of American views on race and identity, The House at the End of the Road examines why ideas about racial identity rooted in the eighteenth century persist today. In lyrical, evocative prose, this extraordinary book pierces the heart of issues of race and racial identity, leaving us ultimately hopeful about the world as our children might see it.
The first and most basic lesson of genealogy is to talk to your family. Eubanks (Ever Is a Long Time) interviewed his mother to start to learn about his grandparents, Edna and Jim Richardson, an interracial couple who married, lived together, and raised a family in rural Alabama in the first years of the 20th century. While Eubanks begins by seeking his grandparents' motivations and their methods for subverting societal norms, his memoir eventually broadens to a thoughtful (though still personal) exploration of the construction of race and racial identity, particularly within families that cross the color line. He considers thought-provoking questions like the potential for communication between black and white family members. Eubanks concludes, among other things, that while his own generation threw off the yoke of segregation partly by forging a proud black self-identity, his children seem to see race as a tangible but uninteresting social fact—and to them, race is far less compelling than questions of justice and fairness. VERDICT Highly recommended, especially for memoir readers or patrons interested in thoughtful and personal considerations of race.—Emily-Jane Dawson, Multnomah Cty. Lib., Portland, OR
More Reviews and RecommendationsW. Ralph Eubanks is the author of Ever Is a Long Time, which Washington Post book critic Jonathan Yardley named as one of the best nonfiction books of 2003. A 2007 Guggenheim Fellow, he is currently a Bernard Schwartz Fellow at the New America Foundation. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife and three children.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
October 06, 2009: I thought this book was most interesting in the way it presented racial relations in the early part of the 20th Century. I wouldn't have thought that the offspring of an Interracial marriage would have had a more difficult time of coping in society than those of an all Black or all White family. I thought that Mr. Eubanks did an outstanding job in gathering background information on his grandparents and their problems in being accepted by the Richardson family as well as the Howell family.
While my wife and I both read the book, we agreed that it's not a book that we would buy to give to a friend.Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
July 27, 2009: W. Ralph Eubanks work on race in America is a must read for all Americans. Americans see race as only a divisive issue. It doesn't have to be.
Please read this book. You will come away with a better view of your fellow Americans no matter what race they are. You will get an idea of how change is here, and how to address it.I Also Recommend: Slavery By Another Name.