Racehoss (e-bog) af Sample, Albert
Sample, Albert (forfatter)

Racehoss e-bog

140,02 DKK (inkl. moms 175,03 DKK)
';A timeless classic' (San Antonio Express-News), reissued with a new foreword, afterword, and ten percent more material about a black man who spent seventeen years on a brutal Texas prison plantation and underwent a remarkable transformation.First published in 1984, Racehoss: Big Emma's Boy is Albert Race Sample's ';unforgettable' (The Dallas Morning News) tale of resilience, revelation, and r...
E-bog 140,02 DKK
Forfattere Sample, Albert (forfatter), Sample, Carol (introduktion)
Forlag Scribner
Udgivet 22 maj 2018
Længde 416 sider
Genrer BM
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781501183997
';A timeless classic' (San Antonio Express-News), reissued with a new foreword, afterword, and ten percent more material about a black man who spent seventeen years on a brutal Texas prison plantation and underwent a remarkable transformation.First published in 1984, Racehoss: Big Emma's Boy is Albert Race Sample's ';unforgettable' (The Dallas Morning News) tale of resilience, revelation, and redemption. Born in 1930, the mixed-race son of a hard-drinking black prostitute and a white cotton broker, Sample was raised in the Jim Crow South by an abusive mother who refused to let her sonwho could pass for whitecall her Mama. He watched for the police while she worked, whether as a prostitute, bootlegger, or running the best dice game in town. He loved his mother deeply but could no longer take her abuse and ran away from home at the age of twelve. In his early twenties, Sample was arrested for burglary, robbery, and robbery by assault and was sentenced to nearly twenty years in the Texas prison system in the 1950s and 60s. His light complexion made him stand out in the all-black prison plantation known as the ';burnin' hell,' where he and over four hundred prisoners picked cotton and worked the land while white shotgun-carrying guards followed on horseback. Sample earned the moniker ';Racehoss' for his ability to hoe cotton faster than anyone else in his squad. A profound spiritual awakening in solitary confinement was a decisive moment for him, and he became determined to turn his life around. When he was finally released in 1972, he did just that. Though Sample was incarcerated in the twentieth century, his memoir reads like it came from the nineteenth. With new stories that had been edited out of the first edition, a foreword by Texas attorney and writer David R. Dow, and an afterword by Sample's widow, Carol, this new edition of Racehoss: Big Emma's Boy offers a more complete picture of this extraordinary time in America's recent past.