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White Lies

The Double Life of Walter F. White and America's Darkest Secret

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A New Yorker Best Book of the Year 2022

An "electrifying" biography of Walter White, a little-remembered Black civil rights leader who passed for white in order to investigate racist murders, help put the NAACP on the map, and change the racial identity of America forever (Chicago Review of Books).

Walter F. White led two lives: one as a leader of the Harlem Renaissance and the NAACP in the early twentieth century; the other as a white newspaperman who covered lynching crimes in the Deep South at the blazing height of racial violence. Born mixed race and with very fair skin and straight hair, White was able to "pass" for white. He leveraged this ambiguity as a reporter, bringing to light the darkest crimes in America and helping to plant the seeds of the civil rights movement.

White's risky career led him to lead a double life. He was simultaneously a second-class citizen subject to Jim Crow laws at home and a widely respected professional with full access to the white world at work. His life was fraught with internal and external conflict—much like the story of race in America. Starting out as an obscure activist, White ultimately became Black America's most prominent leader, during his time. A character study of White's life and career with all these complexities has never been rendered, until now.

By the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of The Accidental President, Dewey Defeats Truman, and The Arsenal of Democracy, White Lies uncovers the life of a civil rights leader unlike any other.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from November 29, 2021
      Historian Baime (Dewey Defeats Truman) delivers a captivating portrait of civil rights activist and novelist Walter White (1893–1955) and the fight to end anti-Black violence and racial discrimination in the U.S. Born into a family of “light-skinned Negroes” in Atlanta, White had blue eyes, pale skin, and blond hair. (“The traits of my race are nowhere visible upon me,” he wrote in his autobiography.) He took an executive position at the NAACP in 1917 and went undercover as a white man to report on the Red Summer of 1919, the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, and other outbreaks of racial violence in the South. Baime seamlessly interweaves White’s harrowing investigations with his life in Harlem, where he was at the epicenter of a flowering of a Black arts and activism scene that included Claude McKay, Paul Robeson, and Langston Hughes, and delves into the NAACP’s unsuccessful campaign to get an anti-lynching bill through Congress, tensions between the civil rights group and the U.S. Communist Party, and the fallout from White’s decision to divorce his wife for a white woman in 1949. Filled with vibrant period details and lucid explanations of legal and political matters, this is a riveting portrait of a complex and courageous crusader for racial equality.

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  • English

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