Full description not available
E**N
Informative travel guide
Informative guide and shared information about historical site,places and travel about Black American
S**N
"negro stops"
Sad and a time that I would like to say is gone. It is just more subtle today. Harsh reality. Book however is great, if you can use that term.
M**.
I loved
I loved flipping through this. It’s a great piece of history
M**R
All the information
Good to have this History
M**I
Great history piece!
Very interesting piece. I would love to see if any of the places still exist. Or if anyone could write about these places. Great history piece!
T**H
An inconvenient FACT of history
On the one hand I feel like a primal scream of outrage and want to give this ZERO stars because it just never should have existed at all.On the other hand, it is such a fine example of resilience, of finding a way to make things work in an impossible world, that I want to give it TEN stars.Let's compromise at FIVE stars.It's rare to include photos with a book review. I want to make two points with these pics.1. The Table of Contents shows just how slim this book really is. A mere 48 pages cover the information available for 48 states. That is not actually one page per state. Sometimes it covers two and a half states on a single page. New York City gets more ink than anywhere else.2. There is a nice article in the middle of this slim volume that describes a trip by Greyhound bus. The second photo shows the first two pages of this article. Each reader may have a different impression or take-away so I leave it to you to read it yourself.In the 1940 described by this Green Book, the Great Depression had waned enough so people might travel because they needed to or wanted to travel. World War II had not yet absorbed the country. Jim Crow was a solid reality, and more widespread than I realized years ago.For perspective, what could the Negro Motorist could look forward to in Washington, DC? 7 hotels (including YWCA and YMCA), 4 "tourist homes," 3 taverns, 2 restaurants, 3 beauty shops (but zero barbers listed), 1 garage and 2 service stations, 2 taxicab companies, 1 country club, and 2 night clubs. Other than NYC that may be the longest listing for a single city in the book. All that information occupies less than half of one page.There are not many country clubs listed in the 1940 Green Book. I looked up the one listed for DC. I got exactly zero hits on every internet search for a country club named Grossland's. There's a message there about invisibility.I'm glad I've seen this Green Book, and at the same mighty sorry I ever saw it. It's the kind of incontrovertible piece of history that shows just how deep the white mythos of the era really was. Movies were all white. TV in the 50s was nearly all white. History textbooks of the 30s, 40s, and 50s were basically all white.Perhaps this review will in some way be helpful in bringing some attention to this little piece of history.
B**B
historical book
great for my history class
F**R
Important piece of our nation's history -- a part that I lived!
I'm old enough to remember that when we traveled to see our relatives and took our almost-a-member-of-the-family black helper for my mother (my father had tuberculosis and was hospitalized), we had to put our mother's helper up in a different motel, since most motels wouldn't accept a black guest. I didn't understand this as a child, but I sure do now! My daughter uses this book in her classroom when she teaches this part of American history. It happened, and the upcoming generation will be all the wiser for knowing about it and understanding this part of our country's legacy.
A**R
This is part of US History
The fact that I didnt’ find out about this until I was around 55 years old is almost criminal. The scholastic curriculum in US is full of holes and in order to make it whole, the system needs to address (under a microscope) all of the history belonging to the US, otherwise it is a tale of unicorns and rainbows. I suggest everyone read this book so that people can understand the two tier system that was allowed to exist, until the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
M**L
Le chemin fut long pour tous les gens de couleur noire.
C'est un plus de lire ce tout petit livre qui nous montre bien comment la ségrégation est une plaie. Je suis Blanc et je suis honteux de cette époque. Sans flagellation je recommande vivement le DVD et ce petit ouvrage. Merci et pardon aux auteurs, aux acteurs et aux victimes.
E**R
historia
extraordinaria obra que explica la historia no escrita de estats units
V**S
Text sehr klein gedruckt
Da hätte eine Lupe mitgeliefert werden sollen, bzw. erwähnen das es kleiner gedruckt als üblich ist.
R**R
Relive the Film
Bought this facsimile edition to further my interest in the film. Very interesting but readers need to go through the pages of hotel and filling station entries to extract some of the sentiments and details of life for African American drivers in the thirties and forties. Well worth adding to your collection.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago