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Marita Golden

Saving Our Sons: Raising Black Children in a Turbulent World

Saving Our Sons

Marita Golden began her writing career with Migrations of the Heart, a memoir about living with her husband in his native Nigeria. In Migrations, Golden described how it was only with the birth of her child-a son-that she was truly respected, for in that culture males are held in the highest esteem. Ten years later, in Saving Our Sons, Golden presents, in essence, her son's story.

Having returned to the United States from Nigeria, Marita and Michael, in his teens, find their lives haunted by evidence of a horrifying statistic: The leading cause of death among Black males under the age of twenty-one is homicide. The boy who was once surrounded by a warm, loving African family is now looked upon with scorn by many Whites and with a deep, aching fear by his fellow African-Americans that his life may be casually taken.

Through the story of raising her son against the backdrop of a racially divided society, Golden confronts the causes of the violence that surrounds the legacy of her own generation's struggle for civil rights. She talks to psychologists, writers, and young Black men-criminals and scholars both-and explores how single Black mothers are often blamed for troubled youth.

In this fiercely lyrical and revealing narrative, Golden has created a work of profound and lasting importance: a book that sensitively and uniquely addresses the problems of boyhood and emerging manhood. This is a book in which mothers across the country will see themselves and their sons.

Praise for Saving Our Sons:

"I pray we will read and heed her urgent call to save our sons."

-Marian Wright Edelman, President
Children's Defense Fund

"This is a driven narrative, a revealing book, a leveling experience. Saving Our Sons spans gulfs of misperceptions and fears with the mother of all bridges-love. Hope in the future value of each new living self is what propels this book, along with Golden's sharp, certain prose."

-Ralph Wiley, author of Why Black People Tend to Shout

Wild Women Don't Wear No Blues: Black Women Writers on Love, Men and Sex Skin Deep: Black Women and White Women Write About Race Saving Our Sons: Raising Black Children in a Turbulent World A Miracle Every Day Migrations of the Heart The Edge of Heaven And Do Remember Me Long Distance Life A Woman's Place GUMBO AFTER


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Photo by Carol Clayton.