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Book Review By David Loftus
Confederacy of Silence by Richard Rubin

In the fall of 1988 Handy Campbell, a black senior who played football only two seasons, was leading the Greenwood High (Mississippi) Bulldogs into the championship playoffs with a quarterback's throwing arm that man say is NFL material. Handy's great season was covered by Richard Rubin, a native New Yorker whose first job out of college was sports editor for the Greenwood paper. Rubin covers the games, is moved over to news reporting, and describes the curious ways of the Mississippi Delta region -- whose unfailingly good manners clashes jarringly with its lingering racism.

Six years later, Handy had not only failed to achieve great things in college and pro ball, but he had dropped out of several schools and is in jail for murder. Rubin returned to Mississippi to cover the trial and try to figure out what happened to this promising young player. This 2002 book is a fascinating and thought-provoking tale about life today in the deep South.


Plot & Themes
Political/social rights fight Yes
Plotlet:
job/profession:
Job/profession/poverty story Yes
Period of greatest activity? - 1950+

Subject of Biography
Gender - Male
Profession/status:
Ethnicity - Black
Nationality - American

Setting
How much descriptions of surroundings? - 4 ()
United States Yes
The US: - Deep South
Small town? Yes
Small town people: - hostile, like Gomer Pyle on steroids
Misc setting - prison
Century: - 1980's-Present

Writing Style
Book makes you feel? - concerned
Pictures/Illustrations? - None
How much dialogue in bio? - significantly more descript than dialog
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