When I Was Little I Used to Be Colored

The Story Of Life In A Real Village

by Carl A. Benson Sr.


Formats

Softcover
$14.95
Hardcover
$23.99
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$14.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 11/5/2012

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 112
ISBN : 9781477285411
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 112
ISBN : 9781477287514
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 112
ISBN : 9781477285428

About the Book

AS A CHILD I WAS SOMEWHAT aware of the differences between colored life and white life but it was not so much based on race, I thought is was just the way it was. I lived in the ghetto and white children lived in the suburbs. I’d seen the way they lived when a gang of us would take our shovels and ride the bus to the suburbs to shovel snow for a quarter a yard. Beautiful houses and yards and white kids who didn’t have to shovel, just watched us from their windows do the work. The differences were magnified when we saw television and especially the commercials where white women dressed in bright clothes just to mop the beautiful floors in their beautiful homes, or stand at the door and wave goodbye to their men going off to work in suits and ties and wide brimmed felt hats. I thought the most beautiful houses in the world were those houses we shoveled snow from the 200 feet driveways in Shaker Heights. The houses, mansions, were huge white siding mansions with black Shutters on the windows; maybe one hundred windows, or so it seemed. The roofs were black asphalt shingles which set the house off even more than the dozens of trees, mostly pine, around the property. The lawns were so big you could play Hide the paddle, or It and never be found just hiding behind those massive trees. The grass, yes grass, in the yards looked like it had been carpeted with each blade the same height. In the winter the grass would be so white and pure looking you would think it was painted by Thomas Kinkade.


About the Author

Carl is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati during the turbulent Civil Rights Days of the sixties. His writing debut came as a teacher in the Cincinnati Public School System writing a screenplay for his fifth grade students. A film of his screen play was actually performed by his class. Later, as a Human Resources Director, Carl published several articles for major professional human resources magazines, one article entitled “From The Top of The Heap to The Bottom of The Heap, The Heap Reversal Theory” was used as a reference in a class at Ohio State University. Carl has been a lecturer at several universities and colleges and taught African and African American History at Defiance College in Ohio and the University of Idaho, Idaho Falls Campus. He also taught Urban Sociology at St. Francis College in Fort Wayne, Indiana. “What Your Black Friends Don’t Tell You” was Carl’s first book, which was featured at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books 2012. “When I Was Little I Used To Be Colored” is Carl’s second book.