This is one of the better books I have read that mixes a personal memoir with a foray into past history. The author did a fantastic job blending the two into each other, a cohesive and moving story about a young woman trying to come to terms with her blackness and learning about the grandfather she never knew. She was raised in San Diego, her father played for the Chargers, a privileged upbringing as far as money, but she never felt loved by her mother and never realized nor understood the barriers of her race.
The Mississippi Delta, the town of Greenwood, where her mother and father came from, where her grandfather was one of the few blacks that not only had money but owned his own restaurant called Booker's Place. He was also a waiter at Luscos, a preeminent restaurant in the Jim Crow south. Does an amazing job describing the genesis of the Delta and what life was like for the blacks who resided there. Some of this is very difficult to read, even after the civil Rights movement things were not any better, in fact trying to shove these new laws down the throats of many resistant whites made things even more difficult. But, as she finds out when she travels down there searching for her roots, information about her grandfather, things were not clear cut, she found some goodness even in those she felt were evil, or acted in evil ways.
The writing is very good and I applaud the author in what I felt was some very fine and fair story telling, her trying to understand both sides of the movement. Not being southern myself I learned much from this book, and from many different viewpoints. The book mentions a documentary that her grandfather was in that opened the floodgates, making real what blacks actually thought of how they were treated and bringing the problems in this town into the light. Need to see if I can find that anywhere.
Yvette Johnson grow up in a white world. Her father was a NFL player and her childhood was spent surrounded by wealthy white people. She felt that her race wasn't an issue. She thought that racism was in the past. She thought her fellow Black people were just exaggerating when they talked about the racism they had experienced. Even when she herself experienced racism, she decided it was something else because racism ended in 1960's.
Then one day she made a discovery that would completely change her world.
In 1966 NBC aired a documentary Mississippi: A Self Portrait. Which chronicles the racial strife happen in Greenwood, Mississippi. Greenwood was located only about 16 minutes from the town Money, Mississippi where Emmett Till was kidnapped, tortured and killed in 1955. This documentary mostly focused on the white residents of Greenwood, with the exception of one Black man, a waiter and local business owner Booker Wright. Bookers words sent shockwaves through Greenwood and turned Booker into an unexpected local civil rights leader.
The Song and the Silence is about Yvette's struggle with coming to terms with her own self hatred and her journey to get to know her grandfather Booker.
This book was so good. It was part memoir part history of racism in the south. It's a hard read at times. Yvette does not hold back when describing the atrocities committed by white people against Black people. It was a brutal read but I think its important to read this things as a way of never forgetting that these things happened back then and they still happen today.
I liked this one. It is nonfiction that covers much of the history regarding the fight for civil rights and what life was like without these rights. I liked that this book covered the good, the bad and the ugly. The research included many different sources and it was presented well in this book. It bounced around in time, but it seemed to be reigned in tightly. I also liked that this was about the author's ancestral roots. I love family history stories. So 4 stars.
Amazing story; engaging and emotional, this is a memoir and a story of self-discovery.
And yes, I'll be honest, I was really, really annoyed by the author's attitude at the beginning of the book but as we submerge into the story I began to understand her and her mindset. And I loved how this search for the story of her grandfather brought her that ability to finally understand her mother.
A book about race, power and family, this is a great, powerful story, very well written and wonderfully narrated by Robin Miles.
The basis of the book-the search for her grandfather's story-was a good one. I would have preferred more of his story. Civil rights history, particularly in Mississippi, is a topic in which I have much interest, hence my picking up this book. I would have preferred less of a memoir and more of a history or sociological study about the Delta, current vs. former Greenwood, etc. This is just one person's opinion. You may like it so don't let me spoil it.
Yvette Johnson travels to Greenwood, MS, to learn about her grandfather, Booker Wright, who was murdered the year before she was born. Her writing is eloquent, and we get a sense of the man and the cultures - white and black - of 1960's Greenwood. Difficult to read and impossible to put down, Johnson's memoir should be required reading. Highly recommended.
Yvette Johnson was a member of my classic lit book club in Phoenix. It was with great anticipation and celebration that I received my copy of Yvette's book. What a thrill to read her words so beautifully written.
Her book is part memoir, part Civil Rights history, and part biography of her courageous grandfather, Booker Wright. She seamlessly weaves the stories together, unveiling her feelings around race and family, while revealing a family secret that helped changed the course of history.
The Song and the Silence is a way into the conversation about race that we so desperately need right now. This isn’t to sound preachy. Yvette certainly is never preachy in her book. She is real and authentic about her experiences, both in her life and what she discovered in her search for more about her grandfather.
Through The Song and the Silence, Yvette graciously opens the door and invites us in and, I for one, am so grateful for the opportunity to be a part of her community.
I don’t typically review or recommend books but this one has so few on goodreads and amazon I thought I’d give it a quick plug. This memoir describes the author’s search into her past, focusing on her grandfather who lived during the civil rights era in Mississippi. This story examined race and history (of the deep south) in a way that seemed to pull the layers back more slowly, circling issues from a distance, which for me really helped it all sink in. Thank you Ms. Johnson for the work you did to share your story and your grandfather with the world! I really enjoyed your book.
I was browsing the pages of Net Galley and ran across this gem of a memoir. Often when someone that isn’t famous gets an autobiography published by a major publisher, it’s a hint to the reader that the story will be riveting. Such is the case here; my many thanks go to Net Galley and Atria for the DRC, which I read free in exchange for this honest review. You can order it now' it comes out Tuesday, May 9.
It probably says a great deal, all by itself, that I had never heard of Booker Wright before this. I have a history degree and chose, at every possible opportunity, to take classes, both undergraduate and graduate level, that examined the Civil Rights Movement, right up until my retirement a few years ago. As a history teacher, I made a point of teaching about it even when it wasn’t part of my assigned curriculum, and I prided myself on reaching beyond what has become the standard list that most school children learned. I looked in nooks and crannies and did my best to pull down myths that cover up the heat and light of that critical time in American history, and I told my students that racism is an ongoing struggle, not something we can tidy away as a fait accompli.
But I had never heard of Booker.
Booker Wright, for those that (also) didn’t know, was the courageous Black Mississippian that stepped forward in 1965 and told his story on camera for documentary makers. He did it knowing that it was dangerous to do so, and knowing that it would probably cost him a very good job he’d had for 25 years. It was shown in a documentary that Johnson discusses, but if you want to see the clip of his remarks, here’s what he said. You may need to see it a couple of times, because he speaks rapidly and with an accent. Here is Booker, beginning with his well-known routine waiting tables at a swank local restaurant, and then saying more:
So it was Booker and his new-to-me story that made me want to read the DRC. Johnson opens with information from that time, but as she begins sharing her own story, discussing not only Booker but her family’s story and in particular, her own alienation from her mother, who is Booker’s daughter, I waited for the oh-no feeling. Perhaps you’ve felt it too, when reading a biography; it’s the sensation we sometimes feel when it appears that a writer is using a famous subject in order to talk about themselves, instead. I’ve had that feeling several times since I’ve been reading and reviewing, and I have news: it never happened here. Johnson’s own story is an eloquent one, and it makes Booker’s story more relevant today as we see how this violent time and place has bled through to color the lives of its descendants.
The family’s history is one of silences, and each of those estrangements and sometimes even physical disappearance is rooted in America’s racist heritage. Johnson chronicles her own privileged upbringing, the daughter of a professional football player. She went to well-funded schools where she was usually the only African-American student in class. She responded to her mother’s angry mistrust of Caucasians by pretending to herself that race was not even worth noticing. But as children, she and her sister had played a game in which they were both white girls. They practiced tossing their tresses over their shoulders. Imagine it.
Johnson is a strong writer, and her story is mesmerizing. I had initially expected an academic treatment, something fairly dry, when I saw the title. I chose this to be the book I was going to read at bedtime because it would not excite me, expecting it to be linear and to primarily deal with aspects of the Civil Rights movement and the Jim Crow South that, while terrible, would be things that I had heard many times before. I was soon disabused of this notion. But there came a point when this story was not only moving and fascinating, but also one I didn’t want to put down. I suspect it will do the same for you.
YouTube has a number of clips regarding this topic and the documentary Johnson helped create, but here is an NPR spot on cop violence, and it contains an interview of Johnson herself from when the project was released. It’s about 20 minutes long, and I found it useful once I had read the book; reading it before you do so would likely work just as well:
Johnson tells Booker’s story and her own in a way that looks like effortless synthesis, and the pace never slackens. For anyone with a post-high-school literacy level, an interest in civil rights in the USA, and a beating heart, this is a must-read. Do it.
A friend of mine just came back from a memoir-writing workshop. We talked about it on a walk around the duck pond near our houses. You need to have a narrative, my friend said. You need to have yourself as a character. You need to have a focus and a lens and a frame and basically, you can't be all rambly (like I often am).
The Song and the Silence is rambly. It's a unfocused. Neither means that it isn't compelling, but it's muddled. Johnson discovers her grandfather appeared in a 1960s television documentary about desegregation attempts in Mississippi. Her grandfather, a black singing waiter at a white's only restaurant, detailed how no matter what, around the white restaurant patrons, he smiles. He smiles but that doesn't mean he's happy. As the book's blurb says: he described what life was truly like for the black people of Greenwood, Mississippi.
Except the book isn't about Johnson's grandfather. It's about Johnson discovering about her grandfather, and maybe it would just be better about her grandfather. I'm rarely a fan of making the discoverer the protagonist rather than the person who is being discovered. As an example, I don't really need to read about Johnson having a fight with her mother about whether her kids can watch some Disney movie or not. If that fight could somehow be tied back into the struggle Johnson's grandfather endured, then maybe. But the clumps where Johnson writes about her own life are not deftly woven in to her grandfather's story. Johnson works hard to make this a memoir, when maybe this was better suited as a non-fiction about her grandfather's life. Her writing is stronger not writing about herself.
I just don't know what I was supposed to take away from this experience.
The Song and the Silence by Yvette Johnson went on sale May 2, 2017.
I received a copy free from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
In this part-memoir, part historical family investigation, the author seeks to uncover the story of her grandfather, Booker Washington, who lived and owned a restaurant in the small town of Greenwood, Mississippi in the 1950’s and 60’s. Booker gained brief local notoriety after appearing in an NBC documentary explaining the indignities he faced as a waiter at a restaurant serving the town’s upper-class whites, a job he worked in addition to running his own restaurant in the black part of town. As she travels back to the town that her family came from, she discovers a complex and at times tragic history that awakens in her a sense of the trauma inflicted by the wounds of slavery and discrimination, as well as an appreciation for the resiliency of her family. She seems to find in this investigation a connection to the past that had been missing in her upbringing, far away from the Mississippi Delta where her family history played out.
The grandfather’s story, as she uncovers it, is fascinating. His life spans from the early 20th century through the civil rights movement and with it both the author and the reader learn of the injustice that marked and impeded Booker’s life; at the same time, he worked hard to build a life of success. Booker, with his central presence in the rarely overlapping spheres of the black and white cultures of the town, is known to all, and to everyone seems to be a different person. Through his story, the author explores the trauma of slavery and discrimination of the micro level of the family. We learn along with her the tragedy of a history in which slavery wasn’t immediately abolished but transformed into a more nuanced system of oppression through sharecropping and segregation laws. This book is an engaging personal history, and a thought-provoking exploration of the ways in which wounds can reverberate through history and society over the course of generations.
I picked up this book off the library shelf because the title reminded me of a song that was pervasive in my childhood ( The Sounds of Silence, Simon and Garfunkel). It was in many ways a book about childhood. How that time in our lives is so critical to the person we become as we get older. It is also the story of Yvette's journey in understanding her heritage and where she fits into to her family history. It is a view through the grimiest of windows in which a small spot is cleared away by a shirtsleeve to be able to peek through onto our nations past. I felt compelled to write a review as her book touched me and I felt a sort of kinship in her experience. This is both the result of my background as well as the way in which she engages the reader. The cruelty described in her book ( though not something I have never heard before) sent shivers down my spine. Yet, the light and life that Yvette brings to her story, invests in her future and her children's future is like the warmth that washes over you when you come in from the cold. The construction of her grandfathers story intertwined with her own self discovery is a fresh colorful way of relating this story. Her writing is superb and I often found myself re-reading paragraphs or phrases just to have a second opportunity to re-experience the joy of such a well written word.
This book was an unexpected find on Audible.com as I was searching for books to listen to within the membership I already pay for. It may be one of the best nonfiction things I read/ listen to this year. It’s the story of a Black woman who thought she came from nothing (her words) and ended up researching her family history after learning about a grandfather who was interviewed for NBC News during the Modern Civil Rights Movement about a year before he was killed in Mississippi. As she learned about Greenwood, MS and the Delta, she discovered meaningful people, actions, history (people and place), and relationships that reshaped her understanding of not only her family, but her place in the world and race in the US as a modern woman. Her grandfather's story was astonishing.
It’s a brilliant book for anyone who thinks, “Why do they always say it’s always about race?” It’s a beautifully written combination of memoir and biography. It touches on Civil Rights history and genealogy/ family history research. And it’s just a really compelling story that is wonderfully told. Highly recommended.
I loved this book. Yvette Johnson is a gracious, insightful commentator not only on the Jim Crow Race Era in the Mississippi Delta but the resulting consequences to all in the area. Her grandfather, Booker Wright became a national figure in an NBC Documentary in 1963. In the documentary, Booker described his relations with people as a waiter at an upscale restaurant in Greenwood, MS. As a result of this interview he is discharged as a waiter. Booker also independently owns his own club called "Booker's Place". He is later shot and killed at his club in a disagreement with a customer he was evicting.
Johnson has never been told of all these family stories and so does a deep dive look at her grandfather, the black community of Greenwood, the White Citizens Council of Greenwood and other factors that lead to the implicit racism of the Jim Crow South. Her conclusions are fascinating and insightful.
A story about Booker Wright, a southern small town (Greenwood, Mississippi) hero and civil rights icon, and Race relations. The story is brought to us from his granddaughter, who stumbled upon his life/story. Booker ran his own business in the Mississippi Delta in the mornings and evenings he waited tables for a whites only restaurant (Lucas), which is still operating today. They figured Blacks couldn't read nor write, so they made the waiters sing the menu. One day a news/journalist was dining there and Booker spoke his peace about life for Black people of Greenwood, Mississippi, not knowing that they were the only ones living in civil unrest, segregation, and racism. You can look at the footage, it's called “Have to keep that smile,” Booker Wright said in the 1966 NBC documentary Mississippi: A Self-Portrait. This book addressed so much, things sweep under rugs in families, and towns. Even Bookers murder..... #Book34of2021 #BookLover #bookworm #whatsnext
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
One of the best books I have ever read on the struggle for black equality in the United States
This genre is vital to my education as a white Mississippian who grew up during the 50's and 60's civil rights movement. I feel it is my responsibility to read everything I can to understand black history. It was not taught nor even mentioned in the public school system of my youth.
My heart breaks when I consider all I experienced and witnessed in my childhood days on the playground and on into my adulthood. I witnessed this era with my soul. I love this book!!! Truth is spoken here. I knew the Smith family of the moving company mentioned in this book. I saw the trial in session when I was 16 walking home from school. My life was impacted by that case.
My deepest gratitude to Yvette Johnson and her family's story as it is so important to my own family history. I will always cherish reading this book. It is written with heart and soul.
This was a mix of some of the unnerving history of racism in the South, and a dive into the author’s family history, along with her own internal struggles dealing with racism. I don’t usually have high expectations for books in the audible membership catalog because my experience hasn’t always been great, but this was an unexpected gem amongst the usually subpar books I’ve tried in the catalog. The narrator was perfect and Yvette Johnson’s words are so descriptive and beautiful, they pulled me in right from the very beginning. I loved learning Booker Wright’s story and his deep impact from one short, but deeply moving, interview, and highly enjoyed going along Yvette’s own journey in uncovering this history and finding her roots.
A masterful glance into the dark and rampant racism in the South during a period of unspeakable injustice to African Americans. Johnson uses a powerful narrative to construct a vivid image of life during a time of inequality during the Civil Rights Era. Her plight tells a story of pain, personal searching and insight, racial tension, and she shares her own story of struggle with the racial divide.
This is all done with beautiful description of a journey to find something more than a history of one's grandfather. It's power lies in Johnson's own story, too.
A masterful glance into the dark and rampant racism in the South during a period of unspeakable injustice to African Americans. Johnson uses a powerful narrative to construct a vivid image of life during a time of inequality during the Civil Rights Era. Her plight tells a story of pain, personal searching and insight, racial tension, and she shares her own story of struggle with the racial divide.
This is all done with beautiful description of a journey to find something more than a history of one's grandfather. It's power lies in Johnson's own story, too.
I usually enjoy memoirs that are combined with the history of a place, (in this case, Greenwood Mississippi), and this was no exception. The authors tough early life and bouts of depression along with her research on her grandfather is fascinating reading. However, the sections that describe the cruel things done to the African American residents is not for the faint of heart. But everyone should read it. Our society seems to be forgetting or looking away from the terror that was enacted on our fellow Americans.. (And still is.)
Yvette Johnson takes us on a journey of discovery as she explores the life of her Grandfather Booker Wright. It is interesting to see what goes on with the individuals and real people behind this powerful documentary. I love reading about this period in history and it didn't disappoint. This book had me all in my feelings, and I felt as if I were actually there as the action was taking place. The book was written from the heart, open and honest. I would definitely recommend this book to others.
Excellent read. This book does not only deal with the blatant racism in the South, but also with the author's own coming to terms with living in the post-civil rights USA, and her realization that not all that much has changed since those days. I took this book off the shelves at a library, and was done reading it within a few days. It's hard to put it down, but at times it requires you to just close it in order to digest all the painful history and hatred some people have.
This is an amazing book. I highly recommend it to anyone who needs a better understanding of life in the south before and during the civil rights era.
In the form of a memoir that grew from her efforts to learn about and understand a grandfather she never knew, the author conveys a lot about the awfulness of Jim Crow, lynching, and the effects of racism on its targets. More detail on the Emmett Till story than I've ever seen before. And more details on lynching than I've encountered before.
The cruelty and injustice visited upon black people by white people seemed to know no bounds in this Mississippi town. After reading about Booker Wright, I had to watch the video clip that led to his ostracism. I was surprised to see a man speaking his mind, and that this was somehow incredibly insulting. This book really helped to bring home to me the depth of racism and how hard it is to eradicate.
What a moving memoir! I'm filled with gratitude for Yvette's illumination of little known acts of resistance that helped shape the image of little known towns like Greenwood, Mississippi. She does this while navigating her identity crisis as a black woman trying to ignore racism to avoid being the stereotypical angry black woman. Be prepared. It's a heavy read. I needed some music therapy in-between reads.
""Have to keep that smile", said Booker Wright in the 1966 NBC documentary Mississippi: A Self-Portrait. At the time Wright was a waiter in a Whites-only restaurant and a local business owner who would become an unwitting icon of the civil rights movement. For he did the unthinkable: Before a national audience, he described what life was truly like for the Black people of Greenwood, Mississippi. "
This was such a challenging book for me to read but I so enjoyed it. It forced me to think about race and racism in ways that I never have before. I never considered myself a racist person at all but I think this book required me to do some soul searching and repenting. I will be chewing on this one for a while
What a read!!! So well written, this is a shocking story of both profound hatred and redemption. I had no prior knowledge of the people or events though I have read a great deal of US history and never came across any of these names. This was a good read.
Super, super book! Full of openness, vulnerability, lucid insight and wisdom. I don’t even know how to describe the structure, but it works! All of the important characters and events are well built and come together at the right time.