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Scholarship boy : meditations on family and race  Cover Image Book Book

Scholarship boy : meditations on family and race / Larry I. Palmer.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781589881457
  • ISBN: 1589881451
  • Physical Description: xv, 258 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 22 cm
  • Edition: First Paul Dry Books edition.
  • Publisher: Philadephia, Pennsylvania : Paul Dry Books, Inc., 2020.
Subject: African Americans > Education > New Hampshire > Biography.
African American students > Biography.
African Americans > Race identity.
Race discrimination.
Genre: Autobiographies.
Biographies.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Crawford County.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Crawford County Library-Steelville 371.82 PAL (Text) 33431000590149 Adult Non-Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 9781589881457
Scholarship Boy : Meditations on Family and Race
Scholarship Boy : Meditations on Family and Race
by Palmer, Larry I.
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Summary

Scholarship Boy : Meditations on Family and Race


"Palmer was fourteen years old in September 1958 when he made the unlikely journey alone by train to Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. It is impossible to read this boy's story―'ninth child of ten, and the sixth of seven sons'―without feeling the loneliness of that first passage away from home―a black boy crossing into a bastion of white privilege―and the scale of the transformation that awaited him."― Carrie Brown , author of The Stargazer's Sister In 1958, fourteen-year-old Larry Palmer left his parents and nine siblings at home in St. Louis and boarded a train to attend Phillips Exeter Academy (then an all boys' school) on full scholarship. In Scholarship Boy Palmer reflects on his experiences as a young black boy growing up far from home, learning to fit into a white world without becoming estranged from his closely-knit family. Palmer delves back into the early years of his childhood, and at times all the way to his family's past in rural Arkansas before he was born, and brings the reader up to his undergraduate years at Harvard and his father's death while he attended Yale Law School in the 1960s. The ninth of ten children, he writes about the delicate, complex balances within the family and illustrates the ways his sibling relationships shaped him as he was also being molded by his elite education. Palmer's journey from being the "next-to-the-baby" of his family into adulthood reveals the personal and often hidden costs of cultural migration.

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