Long Time Coming
My Life and the Darryl Hunt Lesson
by
Book Details
About the Book
This is a story of how innocence can be shattered by ignorance, how faith is enduring in the presence of callous disbelief and how right is proven true in the end. This story is an American story and a human story. It is my story and yours. This is a book to read.
Maya Angelou
A rare and beautiful achievement, this honest book holds a true mirror up to a southern city and some of its best and not yet best residents
John Ehle
Jo Anne North Goetz grew up in the racially segregated Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina and discovered her love of teaching in a one-room schoolhouse there. Darryl Hunt was born in the projects of East Winston, never knew his father, and his mother was a drunk who couldn’t raise him. He learned about love from a grandfather he adored.
Goetz and Hunt became friends during the year she taught him in the sixth grade at
This is a beautiful story, and I clearly heard Jo Anne's voice reading it to me. Leigh Somerville McMillan has captured her point of view, her voice, her faith.
Mark Rabil, Attorney for Darryl Hunt
Leigh Somerville McMillan gives us an intimate portrait of Jo Anne Goetz and her friendship with a man wrongly accused of murder – a story of race, justice and redemption.
Phoebe Zerwick, State Editor
The
It is a rare moment in life when people come together, not only to bring out the best in each other, but the best in humanity. Jo Anne Goetz is one of those rare treasures who not only stops and listens, but who knows the truth.
Helice “Sparky” Bridges, Founder & President
Difference Makers International and author of
“Who I Am Makes a Difference”
What a chilling story of love, compassion, longsuffering, courage, deliverance and freedom. Jo Anne Goetz captures the innocence of the human spirit. This is a powerful book
Dwight Lewis, Associate Athletic Director
Student-Athlete Services,
Jo Anne Goetz is among a vanishing breed of teachers -- those whose love and care for their students extends far beyond the classroom.
Angelia J. Fryer, Ed.D.
Asst. Superintendent for Middle School Administration
A courageous inspiration of what is possible when you believe with absolute certainty that it is our place (as human beings) to maintain faith while sharing love and kindness with others.
Keith Froehling, International Inspirational Speaker
Visit www.joannegoetz.com
About the Author
About Jo Anne North Goetz:
Jo Anne North Goetz knew she wanted to be a teacher from the time she was offered the opportunity as a third-grader in a one-room schoolhouse in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina. She graduated from Appalachian State University in 1956 and enjoyed a teaching career that spanned 42 years and won her induction into the prestigious Rhododendron Society of the Reich College of Education at ASU.
Goetz was employed for 31 years in the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County school system and for eight years in
She worked for 33 years in the Governor’s School of North Carolina at Salem College in Winston-Salem as the Director of Recreational Activities for Academically and Artistically Talented Students. In 2000, she organized and served as chairperson of the Governor’s School Foundation.
Goetz’s other honors include the 1984 Philo Middle School Teacher of the Year Award and a 1994 DeKalb County School District Junior High School Teacher of the Year Award. In 1996 she received the Order of the Long Leaf Pine from Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr.
Geotz is past president of Retired School Personnel, has held offices in the Winston-Salem Twin City Host Lion’s Club and served as a deacon at the
About Leigh Somerville McMillan:
Leigh Somerville McMillan has pursued a lifetime of writing that predates her career as a writer. As a child, she loved stories and was delighted to learn to hold a pencil and capture them on the page. Words have always provided her greatest entertainment, but it was only after she received her English degree from
McMillan was the first winner of the Annette Allen Creative Writing Award in 1999 and received a 2003 Journalism Contest Award from the North Carolina Press Association. She was a reporter for the Business Journal of the Triad and currently writes a weekly column for the Winston-Salem Journal and bimonthly for