"Red, White, Black, and Blue" began as a collaborative memoir by William M. Bill Drennen, a European American, and Kojo (William T.) Jones, an African American. These Appalachian men grew up in the South Hills section of Charleston, West Virginia. As boys they played on the same Little League baseball team and experienced just one year together as schoolmates after the all-white Thomas Jefferson Junior High School was desegregated in 1955. After that, class, race, and choice separated their life experiences for forty-five years. In 1992 both had returned to Charleston from lives mostly...
"Red, White, Black, and Blue" began as a collaborative memoir by William M. Bill Drennen, a European American, and Kojo (William T.) Jones, an African...
"Red, White, Black, and Blue" began as a collaborative memoir by William M. Bill Drennen, a European American, and Kojo (William T.) Jones, an African American. These Appalachian men grew up in the South Hills section of Charleston, West Virginia. As boys they played on the same Little League baseball team and experienced just one year together as schoolmates after the all-white Thomas Jefferson Junior High School was desegregated in 1955. After that, class, race, and choice separated their life experiences for forty-five years. In 1992 both had returned to Charleston from lives mostly...
"Red, White, Black, and Blue" began as a collaborative memoir by William M. Bill Drennen, a European American, and Kojo (William T.) Jones, an African...