![]() ![]() ![]() 'If it was a frightening experience for him as nothing but a make-believe Negro for sixty-six days, then you think about what real Negroes in America have gone through for 400 years. John Howard Griffin has come closer to this understanding than any white man that I know.' Louis Lomax, Saturday Review 'There is a saying among Negroes that no white man, no matter how hard he tries, can really understand what it's like to be black in America. ![]() Embraced by some and fiercely criticised by others, its legacy sixty years on remains problematic, but Black Like Me nevertheless stands as a fascinating document of its times. Published in book form two years later it sold over five million copies, revealed to a white audience the daily experience of racism and became one of the best-known accounts of racial injustice in Jim Crow-era America. ![]() Black Like Me is Griffin's own account of his journey. In the autumn of 1959, a white Texan journalist named John Howard Griffin travelled across the Deep South of the United States disguised as a working-class black man. John Howard Griffin was a white American journalist who is best known for his account, Black Like Me, in which he details the experience of darkening his skin. 'An anti-racist classic' Bernardine Evaristo New edition with a foreword by Bernardine Evaristo ![]()
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