Colored People: A Memoir Raoul WallenbergAuthor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Publisher Vintage; Reprint edition (April 11, 1995) Binding Condition like new Summary "Colored People: A Memoir" by Henry Louis Gates Jr. is a deeply moving narrative that chronicles the author's upbringing in the segregated town of Piedmont, West Virginia, during the 1950s and 1960s. Gates vividly captures the essence of African American life in a community shaped by racial boundaries, cultural heritage, and the complex
Drawing upon personal correspondence
urgent wake-up call for the digital age
The jacket shows one burn-like flaw near the bottom edge—likely from a cigarette—but is otherwise bright and attractive
Scarred is also an eye-opening story about abuses of power
Rick leads the survivors into an era of renewal
He focused on the heart of the spiritual with Real Magic and embraced individual sacredness with Your Sacred Self
Born to survivalists in the mountains of Idaho
It is all here
Herriot experiences new challenges and joys every day
Howard provides historical evidence while allowing readers to form their own conclusions about the reach of these clandestine organizations
Some yellowing of the pages but binding is fine
and the birth of urbanization