A pioneering journalist and crusader


 
The Thread
 
The Thread's Must-Read

Monogamy


"Ida B. The Queen: The Extraordinary Life and Legacy of Ida B. Wells" by Michelle Duster


Buy this book


Frederick Douglass admired her bravery and determination. The FBI despised her crusades and influence.

And Ida B. Wells’ great granddaughter, Michelle Duster, the author of a new book about her, writes that she was “inspired” by her grandmother’s refusal “to make herself small, even when others expected that of African-American women.”

Duster’s new book, “Ida B. The Queen: The Extraordinary Life and Legacy of Ida B. Wells,” chronicles Wells’ birth to enslaved parents, her early years as a crusading journalist and her work as a suffragist, organizing the Alpha Suffrage Club in Illinois in 1913 and joining an all-white suffrage march in front of Woodrow Wilson’s White House.

Indeed, Ida B. Wells saw the same potential and political power of Black women that Stacey Abrams has leveraged in Georgia, pushing to register women of color so the first African-American alderman and then congressman could be elected in Chicago.

Ida B. Wells also traveled widely, crusading for anti-lynching legislation, losing patience when white “moderates” wanted to “study” racial discrimination instead of doing something about it.

And yet, Michelle Duster confides that near the end of her life, her great grandmother was not confident that she’d done enough to right the wrongs in America. In 1921, recovering from an illness, Ida B. Wells wrote: “All at once the realization came to me that I had nothing to show for all those years of toil and labor.”

We’ll talk about Ida B. Wells’ remarkable life and enduring legacy when Michelle Duster joins me on Friday at 9 a.m.

—  Kerri Miller | MPR News
Sponsor
Sponsor
 
This Week on The Thread
Author interview: ‘What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat’
“What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat" by Aubrey Gordon
Buy this book

Aubrey Gordon’s new book asks us to take a hard look at anti-fat bias and imagine a world where health and weight aren’t automatically equated.
Ask a Bookseller: A murder mystery set on the North Shore
“The Devil’s Kettle” by J.J. Ollman
Buy this book

Lisa Deyo of Sweet Reads in Austin, Minnesota (across from the Spam Museum) recommended the murder mystery “The Devil’s Kettle” by fellow Austin-based writer J.J. Ollman. 
Just move: Scientist debunks myths about exercise and sleep
“Exercised" by Daniel Lieberman
Buy this book

Paleoanthropologist Daniel Lieberman says the concept of "getting exercise" is relatively new. His new book, “Exercised,” examines why we run, lift and walk for a workout when our ancestors didn't.
After inaugural performance, poet Amanda Gorman tops the Amazon bestseller list
"The Hill We Climb" by Amanda Gorman
Buy this book

Gorman's debut poetry collection and an illustrated book for kids are first and second on the list — on the strength of pre-orders, since both titles won't be out until September.
Surveillance and local police: How technology is evolving faster than regulation
"We See It All: Liberty and Justice in an Age of Perpetual Surveillance" by Jon Fasman
Buy this book

Journalist Jon Fasman says local police are frequently able to access very powerful surveillance tools with little oversight. He writes about the threat to privacy in “We See It All.”
Joan Didion's 'Let Me Tell You What I Mean' offers plenty of 'journalistic gold'
“Let Me Tell You What I Mean” by Joan Didion
Buy this book

There's plenty of journalistic gold in “Let Me Tell You What I Mean,” Didion's new book of 12 previously uncollected essays.
He saved 669 children from Nazis — a new book tells his story to kids
"Nicky & Vera: A Quiet Hero of the Holocaust and the Children He Rescued" By Peter Sís
Buy this book

In “Nicky & Vera,”  Peter Sís chronicles the work of Nicholas Winton, who helped hundreds of kids escape Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia in 1938.
A writer lost his singing voice, then discovered the 'gymnastics' of speech
"This is the Voice" by John Colapinto
Buy this book

New Yorker writer John Colapinto developed a vocal polyp when he began "wailing" with a rock group without proper warmup. His new book explores the human voice's physicality, frailty and feats.
Charles Blow's 'The Devil You Know' is a Black power manifesto for our time
"The Devil You Know: A Black Power Manifesto" by Charles M. Blow
Buy this book

Blow's book is a call to action for Black Americans to reconsider their Great Migration. His main point is this: Racism is everywhere — it's just about what kind of racism you can live with. And for Blow, Southern racism is preferable to its Northern cousin.  
Goade becomes first Native American to win Caldecott Medal
"We Are Water Protectors" by Carole Lindstrom and Michaela Goade
Buy this book

Illustrator Michaela Goade became the first Native American to win the prestigious Randolph Caldecott Medal for best children's picture story, cited for "We Are Water Protectors," a celebration of nature and condemnation of the "black snake" Dakota Access Pipeline.
'When You Trap a Tiger' wins top children's book honors
"When You Trap a Tiger" by Tae Keller
Buy this book

America's librarians awarded Tae Keller's “When You Trap A Tiger” the Newbery Medal. The book's central character is a girl, Lily, whose family moves in with her dying grandmother — and a tiger from Korean folklore shows up looking for something that was stolen. 
The Trojan women — and many more — speak up in 'A Thousand Ships'
"A Thousand Ships" by Natalie Haynes
Buy this book

Natalie Haynes' new book tells the epic story of the Trojan War from the perspectives of the women involved in it. And that means all the women — from Troy and Sparta, goddesses, Amazons and more.

Preference CenterUnsubscribe

This email was sent by: Minnesota Public Radio
480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101