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No Color Is My Kind: Eldrewey Stearns and the Desegregation of Houston

No Color Is My Kind: Eldrewey Stearns and the Desegregation of Houston

Current price: $131.25
Publication Date: October 19th, 2021
Publisher:
University of Texas Press
ISBN:
9781477324653
Pages:
296
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Description

In 1959, a Black man named Eldrewey Stearns was beaten by Houston police after being stopped for a traffic violation. He was not the first to suffer such brutality, but the incident sparked Stearns’s conscience and six months later he was leading the first sit-in west of the Mississippi River. No Color Is My Kind, first published in 1997, introduced readers to Stearns, including his work as a civil rights leader and lawyer in Houston’s desegregation movement between 1959 and 1963. This remarkable and important history, however, was nearly lost to bipolar affective disorder. Stearns was a fifty-two-year-old patient in a Galveston psychiatric hospital when Thomas Cole first met him in 1984. Over the course of a decade, Cole and Stearns slowly recovered the details of Stearns’s life before his slide into mental illness, writing a story that is more relevant today than ever.

In this new edition, Cole fills in the gaps between the late 1990s and now, providing an update on the progress of civil rights in Houston and Stearns himself. He also reflects on his tumultuous and often painful collaboration with Stearns, challenging readers to be part of his journey to understand the struggles of a Black man’s complex life. At once poignant, tragic, and emotionally charged, No Color Is My Kind is essential reading as the current movement for racial reconciliation gathers momentum.

About the Author

Thomas R. Cole is the McGovern Chair and Director of the McGovern Center for Humanities and Ethics at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston. He is the author of several books, including The Journey of Life: A Cultural History of Aging in America, which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and, most recently, Old Man Country: My Search for Meaning Among the Elders.

Praise for No Color Is My Kind: Eldrewey Stearns and the Desegregation of Houston

Divided into three parts with nine well-delineated chapters, this 'historian, medical humanist, and writer' chronicled his struggle to write this biography as much as Stearns struggled to assert his identity as a Black man trying to bring equality to Texans as he descended into insanity. As such, this biography joins the genre of other biographies of civil rights activists such as David Garrow’s biography of King, Les and Tamara Payne’s biography of Malcolm X, and David Levering Lewis’s biography of W.E.B. Du Bois . . . this biography paints an intriguing and complex picture of Stearns.
— Journal of African American History