Walking on water

Walking on water
About this book
Walking on Water is an account of the thoughts, the feelings, the lives, of African Americans in the post-Civil Rights era of the nineties. Traversing the country over a period of six years, Randall Kenan talked to nearly two hundred African Americans, whose individual stories he has shaped into a continent-sized tapestry of black American life today.
He starts his journey in the famous, long-standing black resort community on Martha's Vineyard, travels up through New England, and heads west, visiting Chicago, Minneapolis (home of the singer Prince and of the Pilgrim Baptist Church, with its seven choirs and vast outreach), Coeur d'Alene (skinhead capital of the world), Seattle, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas. He moves on to the South, to Louisiana and St.
Simons Island, where so many slave ships landed, and ends up at home in North Carolina, telling his own family's story.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL109711W
Subjects
TravelUnited StatesCanadaAfrican AmericansInterviewsRace identityRace relationsAnecdotesDescription and travelAfro-AmericansJourneysNew York Times reviewedSocial conditionsUnited states, race relationsCanada, race relationsAfrican americans, race identityCanada, description and travelUnited states, description and travel