Author Nell Lake Shared Prayers, Mixed Blessings This is a fascinating account of an integrated Fundamentalist southern church and its courageous struggles with race. Through his focus on two church couples, one white and one black, Sack… November 16, 2004 Reaping What Was Sown on the Old Plantation This is the tale of a black park ranger and a white landowner, the descendant of slaveowners, in Louisiana. It’s a story about the unearthing of grievances, about perception, truth… November 16, 2004 Against All Odds Suskind won a 1995 Pulitzer for feature writing for this story and its sequel. He later published a book: “A Hope in the Unseen: An American Odyssey from the Inner… November 16, 2004 The French Fry Connection This series has global reach, an international cast of characters—and shows that, to paraphrase Tip O’Neil, “all economics is local.” Read seeks to explain the wide repercussions of the Asian… November 16, 2004 At a Slaughterhouse, Some Things Never Die LeDuff got a job on the cutting floor at a North Carolina slaughterhouse, where the work burns your muscles and dulls your mind. He hacked meat off of bone and… November 16, 2004 Best of Friends, Worlds Apart Ojito profiles two men, one black and one white, who have fled Cuba and live in Miami. In Cuba they were close friends; in America they have grown distant from… November 16, 2004 Growing Up, Growing Apart The eighth installment in The New York Times race series may be the least narrative, in the sense that it is more an organized, persuasive collection of reporting—quotes, background, information—than… November 12, 2004 A Quiet Crusade Shane links infant mortality in Nepal to the U.S.’s own history. He takes a muscular approach to the topic by pointing out the paradox inherent in public health: treating people… July 28, 2004 Previous 1 … 24 25 26 27