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  • Hamilton, Martha McNeil
     
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    Black and white and red all over : the story of a friendship / Martha McNeil Hamilton and Warren Brown.
    by Hamilton, Martha McNeil
     
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    Publisher: 
    New York : PublicAffairs, c2002.
    Edition: 
    1st ed.
    Description: 
    xx, 265 p., [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 20 cm.
    Notes: 
    Includes index.
    Reviews: 
    This profound, earnest and heartfelt book by two Washington Post reporters chronicles two vastly different lives through several memorable decades of American history. Hamilton, a white woman born in blue-collar Houston, and Brown, a black man of segregated New Orleans, explain with well-chosen vignettes how their childhood and young adult experiences laid the groundwork for their unusual pairing as committed friends both in the newsroom and in their private lives. Their individual stories of how they came to be journalists and pioneering hires under the then new affirmative action program are instructive and inspiring, as are their tales of how they struggled against an old boys' network and a glass ceiling. When life's low points, such as the severe mental collapse of Hamilton's daughter and a subsequent divorce, suddenly derail Hamilton's life, Brown remains a steadfast friend and shepherds her from depression to activity. That loyalty is not forgotten when Brown battles an ongoing bout of hypertension and organ failure, which results in a failed attempt to use his wife's transplanted kidney. Told in alternating chapters, Hamilton and Brown map out the terrifying ordeal of transplant surgery, concentrating on their feelings, actions and fears, the concerns of their families and the dangers of the operation. This remarkable book could have descended into shallow theatrics, but its willingness to display both the flaws and strengths of both principals lifts it above the ordinary with its candid tribute to courage and friendship. 288pg. (Nov.) CAHNERS PUBLISHING, c2002.-
    SOC SCI The personal account of an interracial kidney transplant told compassionately and with humor by two Washington Post journalists, this book educates the reader on race and sex discrimination over several generations. The story is told in alternating chapters by each writer, one a black man and the other a white woman. Their paths converge in a close friendship with (white) editor Frank Swoboda in the fiercely competitive Post newsroom. Hamilton comes to the aid of her friend, Brown, when he succumbs to 'Blackman's Disease,' or end-stage renal disease, which destroys his kidney. The authors show how the sometimes-indiscriminate prescription of immunosuppressant drugs to blacks can compromise transplants and how ethnic self-identification rather than genetic testing wrongly determines drug therapy in kidney disease. This book, which began as a series of articles for the Post, is a joy to read, bringing home the palpable connection of the two authors. Recommended for public and academic libraries. Paula N. Arnold, M.L.S., Brighton, MA; 288pg. CAHNERS PUBLISHING, c2003.-
    Citation: 
    LJ 01/00/2003 0139
    PW 10/21/2002 0065
    TO 08/00/2002
    Added Authors: 
    Brown, Warren, 1948-
    ISBN: 
    1586481568 :
    LCCN: 
    2002030687
    No. of Requests: 
    0
    Copy/Holding information
    LocationCollectionCall No.Status 
    Main Library - DaytonAfrican-American Non-fiction Collection305.800973 H219B 2002AvailableRequest This Item Only
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    Huber Heights LibraryAfrican-American Non-fiction Collection305.800973 H219B 2002AvailableRequest This Item Only
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    Madden Hills LibraryAfrican-American Non-fiction Collection305.800973 H219B 2002AvailableRequest This Item Only
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    Westwood LibraryAfrican-American Non-fiction Collection305.800973 H219B 2002AvailableRequest This Item Only
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