When Frank Sikora's six-year-old daughter contracted pneumonia in 1962, his wife Millie vowed that would be the last winter she would spend in Ohio. Despite misgivings about the racial tensions erupting there, they moved their family down south, where Frank hoped to fulfill his dream of becoming a newspaper reporter. When those dreams didn't materialize immediately, mounting bills, repossession and eviction forced them to move in with Millie's parents, Dan and Minnie Belle Helms in rural Wellington, Alabama. With even ...
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When Frank Sikora's six-year-old daughter contracted pneumonia in 1962, his wife Millie vowed that would be the last winter she would spend in Ohio. Despite misgivings about the racial tensions erupting there, they moved their family down south, where Frank hoped to fulfill his dream of becoming a newspaper reporter. When those dreams didn't materialize immediately, mounting bills, repossession and eviction forced them to move in with Millie's parents, Dan and Minnie Belle Helms in rural Wellington, Alabama. With even slimmer prospects for employment in impoverished Calhoun County the Sikoras came to depend heavily upon the Helmses and extended family members and all their lives became closely intertwined. The Helmses were uneducated, unpolished people, but Sikora's narration of his life with them - often humorous but never condescending - provides as compelling a portrait of the attitudes and lifestyle of poor whites in Alabama during the second half of the 20th century as James Agee's monumental work, ?Let Us Now Praise Famous Men?, illuminating the Depression years in Hale County, Alabama. Sikora illustrates how resourceful southern women, in particular, held their families together through trying times Interwoven with this commentary on rural white culture in the Deep South is the story of Sikora's developing career as a newsman. Determined to succeed, he finally lands a job with the Gadsden Times reporting the news of black citizens. From introduction to journalism, Sikora becomes one of Alabama's most acclaimed chroniclers of the civil rights movement, eventually writing some of the acknowledged masterpieces about the subject. Like his landmark book, Selma, Lord, Selma, Sikora?s newest work tells the stories of ordinary Alabamians and their perspective on extraordinary times.
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