C. P. Ellis grew up in the poor white section of Durham, North Carolina, and as a young man joined the Ku Klux Klan. Ann Atwater, a single mother from the poor black part of town, quit her job as a household domestic to join...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

C. P. Ellis grew up in the poor white section of Durham, North Carolina, and as a young man joined the Ku Klux Klan. Ann Atwater, a single mother from the poor black part of town, quit her job as a household domestic to join the civil rights fight. During the 1960s, as the country struggled with the explosive issue of race, Atwater and Ellis met on opposite sides of the public school integration issue. Their encounters were charged with hatred and suspicion. In an amazing set of transformations, however, each of them came to see how the other had been exploited by the South's rigid power structure, and they forged a friendship that flourished against a backdrop of unrelenting bigotry.

Rich with details about the rhythms of daily life in the mid-twentieth-century South, The Best of Enemies offers a vivid portrait of a relationship that defied all odds. By placing this very personal story into broader context, Osha Gray Davidson demonstrates that race is intimately tied to issues of class, and that cooperation is possible--even in the most divisive situations--when people begin to listen to one another.



Similar Products

Misogyny Online: A Short (and Brutish) History (SAGE Swifts)The Third Reconstruction: How a Moral Movement Is Overcoming the Politics of Division and FearThe Skin That We Speak: Thoughts on Language and Culture in the ClassroomLosing Heart: The Moral and Spiritual Miseducation of America's ChildrenThe Art of MemoirHaving Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First 100 YearsPedagogical Matters: New Materialisms and Curriculum Studies (Counterpoints)History of African Americans in North CarolinaLet the Dead Bury Their Dead (Harvest American Writing Series)Memory Practices in the Sciences (Inside Technology)