The Outskirts of Hope: A Memoir of the 1960s Deep South
The Outskirts of Hope: A Memoir of the 1960s Deep South book cover

The Outskirts of Hope: A Memoir of the 1960s Deep South

Paperback – April 7, 2015

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
238
Publisher
She Writes Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1631529641
Dimensions
5.5 x 1 x 8.5 inches
Weight
11.2 ounces

Description

“What makes this book particularly valuable is its vivid depiction of the abhorrent consequences of legalized segregation. What gives it heart is the window it opens to the personal journeys of mother and daughter. An important, riveting history lesson that, unfortunately, is still relevant today.” ―Kirkus Reviews “A sensitive and powerful memoir of racial change in the South in the 1960s.” ―Booklist “ The Outskirts of Hope is a yesteryear tale (1967) that could not be more pertinent and helpful to the racially complex and perturbed time we are living in now.”―Norman Lear “A powerful personal perspective of a tumultuous time in America, seen through the eyes of a mother and her daughter navigating family and societal currents in the midst of the civil rights movement. White and Jewish from Boston, the family is transplanted into the segregated Deep South of the 1960s, trying to make a difference in people’s lives. Although their new world is fraught with fear and anxiety, their strength of character and dedication to being allies rather than bystanders results in their participation in history.” ―Barry Curtiss-Lusher, National Chairman of the Anti-Defamation League “Not all stories about the south are fictional and have characters in them named Atticus and Scout. Some are true and have real people in them named Aura and Jo. But just as Atticus and Scout have seared themselves into our cultural consciousness, Aura and Jo will take up residence in your own after reading The Outskirts of Hope . I began this book thinking it was about civil rights and Mississippi and a Jewish family’s singular, brave saga there in the 1960s. I ended it realizing it is a story about us all. It is an American one. And it is one, told forgivingly, about forgiveness.” ―Kevin Sessums, author of Mississippi Sissy and I Left It on the Mountain “ The Outskirts of Hope is a highly personal narrative that shines a light on the struggles within the Deep South in a passionate, moving way. Told with wit, warmth, and heart, this family’s story places the reader right on the ground as Mound Bayou, Mississippi copes with a world reluctant to change, providing an intimate view of the Civil Rights Movement most have never even considered.” ―Anthony Rudel, author of Hello, Everybody!: The Dawn of American Radio “ The Outskirts of Hope is a courageous confession of a daughter about her mother and herself that lays bare the front line of the American civil rights struggle of the 1960s.” ―Steve Adler, Mayor of Austin, Texas “In the sixties, a lot of people talked the talk about civil rights. The Kruger family lived the life. This sensitive but no-holds-barred account of their life in Mound Bayou, Mississippi is one of the most gripping real-life stories of confronting and dealing with racism ever written. Warning – once you start reading The Outskirts of Hope, you won’t be able to stop.” ―Forrest Preece, Columnist, West Austin News “An unflinching memoir of the hopes, triumphs, and disappointments of a white family that moves to a black community in one of the most segregated areas of the American South in the late 1960s. This engaging book offers a rare and moving narrative of the power of seemingly modest personal activities in delivering the durable social changes promised by laws and policy.” ―Bob Flanagan, Emeritus Professor, Stanford University “This is a fascinating tale of a family who talked the talk and walked the walk during the height of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. The family with their youngest three children left a middle class New England suburb and moved to an essentially all black community in the Mississippi Delta, where the father opened a medical clinic and the mother taught in an all black school and the kids survived, albeit dramatically at times.” ―Dave Richards, former Civil Rights Commissioner “This is the fearless mother-daughter memoir about a white family's move from Boston to a small black town in the Mississippi Delta to help launch the nation's first community health center providing health care to the poor and neediest. The leaders of the civil rights struggle―black and white, male and female―are famous, but we hear much less about the 'ordinary people' in the families that came with them. Aura Kruger and Jo Ivester's journey across the chasms of race and poverty also, profoundly, changed their lives. It may well do the same for readers of their story.” ―H. Jack Geiger, MD, founding director of the Delta Health Center and Arthur Logan Professor Emeritus of Community Medicine, City University of New York Medical School “Ivester’s Jewish-Bostonian family took a chance on the importance of being human at a time when life was minimized based on the color of a person’s skin.xa0Ivester captures the essence of the resulting journey through the dual eyes of a child and her mother as they learn the impact of just saying yes.” ―Gigi Edwards Bryant, Trustee, Austin Community College District Jo Ivester spent two years of her childhood living in a trailer in Mound Bayou, where she was the only white student at her junior high. She finished high school in Florida before attending Reed, MIT, and Stanford in preparation for a career in transportation and manufacturing. Following the birth of her fourth child, she became a teacher. She and her husband teach each January at MIT and travel extensively, splitting their time between Texas, Colorado, and Singapore.

Features & Highlights

  • In 1967, when Jo Ivester was ten years old, her father transplanted his young family from a suburb of Boston to a small town in the heart of the Mississippi cotton fields, where he became the medical director of a clinic that served the poor population for miles around. But ultimately it was not Ivester’s father but her mother―a stay-at-home mother of four who became a high school English teacher when the family moved to the South―who made the most enduring mark on the town. In
  • The Outskirts of Hope
  • , Ivester uses journals left by her mother, as well as writings of her own, to paint a vivid, moving, and inspiring portrait of her family’s experiences living and working in an all-black town during the height of the civil rights movement.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(140)
★★★★
25%
(117)
★★★
15%
(70)
★★
7%
(33)
23%
(106)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Great read about a woman (and her family) who lived history as it happened.

I picked up the Outskirts of Hope in my local bookstore because the author is a local, and I'm also really interested in the Civil Rights era, the period during which most of this memoir takes place. As I read the book, it was really hard to not put myself in the place of Aura, the woman whose life is uprooted in 1967 (along with the rest of her family) from a comfortable Boston existence and transferred to a tiny town in the Mississippi Delta so her husband can start a medical clinic. I'm the age Aura was when the story starts, and I also have a child (Aura's young daughter Jo is also a compelling voice in this memoir, and it's Jo's experience that ends up the linchpin of the story, both bringing their time in MS to a climax, and then providing its coda 40 years later). While the culture shock Aura experiences is constantly interesting to read about, what ends up coming through is how she turns an entirely unpredicted and, at first unwanted, life change into a catalyst for her own new paths in life. She enters Mississippi as a dutiful yet reluctant wife and by the time she leaves...well, I won't spoil it. Suffice to say, there are places in life, both literal and metaphorical, you can never go back to once your eyes are opened.
14 people found this helpful
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Not only is this a wonderfully drawn human portrait of a family that uproots from ...

This book has the pacing and narrative flow of a novel. The structure is also compelling - the author has crafted the memoir from her mother's diary entries, and interspersed some of her own as well. I was immediately captivated by the characters and by their story. Not only is this a wonderfully drawn human portrait of a family that uproots from a middle class to a poor, and from all white to all black, community, with all the adjustments needed - it's also adroitly told social history. Without any preachiness or lecturing, we are given a lesson about race relations in the 60s and now, and about the impact a single person can have on society. The author does a near- impossible thing: She gives us a beautiful homage to mother as both a "real" amd flawed human being, but also a woman of extraordinary courage and commitment.
10 people found this helpful
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A daughter's tribute to her mother and a harsh rembrance of old times there that should not be forgotten.

I picked up Jo Ivester's memoir because of a familial connection. I was once married to her first cousin and knew, in the vaguest of terms, about her time in Mississippi. I'm not sure what I expected to find as I started to read this wonderful book, but it is no magnolia-scented remembrance of days past. In "The Outskirts of Hope," Jo manages to pull off a remarkable feat. Not only has she written a loving tribute to her mother, Aura; she has delivered a visceral reminder of the brutaility and terror of life for African-Americans in the Jim Crow South. The story of the Kruger family's two years in an all-black town (surrounded by "neighbors" that hated its very existence) is at once deeply personal, and highly political. Funny. Enraging. Unflinchingly honest. And a darn good read. Its appearance -- given all the violence against African-Americans that's been in the news lately -- couldn't be more timely. By bringing to life such a terrible time, Jo Ivester reminds us of the truth of Faulkner's famous line, "The past isn't dead. It isn't even past."
Gini Kramer (proud to have once been able to call Aura Kruger "Aunti Aura")
7 people found this helpful
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like what happened to the three boys they sent to ...

This was a very interesting book about a white family from Boston thrust into a small black town in the mid-1960s, told from the perspective of the mother and 11-year-old daughter. The only reason I don't give it five stars is because some threads were simply dropped, like what happened to the three boys they sent to Brandeis on scholarship. And the fact that the parents divorced somewhere along the way was just mentioned in passing -- I think readers deserved more. Much was made of the fact that this was a Jewish family, yet we learn nothing about their lives as Jews, and indeed most of the children do not seem to live Jewish lives as adults. I would have liked to read more about this part of their identity.
3 people found this helpful
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A family and town I will not forget; a memoir that reads like compelling dramatic fiction.

Jo Ivester's The Outskirts of Hope is a memoir that reads like a compelling dramatic fiction. I devoured it, fascinated to know how the characters would develop and change, and what would happen in the family's journey from their upper middle class, white, Jewish suburban Boston life, to the rural isolation of an all-black town in Mississippi. What transpired surprised me.
In this modern era when it has become clear to all that America has not healed our racial divides, living through one family's and one community's experience is a window into understanding where we came from, and how far we have to go. This is a family and town I will not forget.
2 people found this helpful
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I really enjoyed reading this book that touched my heart

I really enjoyed reading this book that touched my heart. I lived on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi all during the 1960's. I could relate to the book. The book was well written and reminds us today how we must remember those times so we can enrich everyone's life regardless of the color of their skin. Thank you Jo and thank you for sharing your mother's life experiences as well. I enjoyed reading the two different perspectives from a 10 year old and a 40 something woman.
2 people found this helpful
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This is much more than a memoir. It's a story of hope and courage.

Jo Ivester takes us back to the 1960s in Mississippi through the eyes of her mother, Aura Kruger, and herself as a ten-to-twelve year old girl.

This book is so much more than being about a white family who moves to an all black town deep in the South. This story is about Aura Kruger and Jo Kruger and their journeys as a woman and girl in a town where even the simplest, most honest of actions could bring about retribution from the KKK or the black community.

As Jo tells the story of her mother teaching at the high school, I found myself wanting to be one of Aura Kruger's students. For she seemed the best of educators Mississippi or the United States could have. She took risks to teach her students; and teach she did. She challenged and exposed her students to ideas and materials which they never would have confronted had she not been their teacher.

Jo tells of what happens to herself to make the family leave town, and I wanted to jump through the pages and throttle the boys. Yet, Aura and Leon face the adversity head-on, Aura with grace and honesty while shaking inside.

As a reader, I've come to love memoirs which is something I never thought I would say. This is much more than a memoir. After a few pages it becomes a story with characters you fall in love with, root for, and cry with.

I received a copy of this book from Sparks Press for my honest review.
2 people found this helpful
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Political decisions made powerful and personal -- A moving story!

Jo Ivester's book is a powerful description of a number of things: 1) The terrible social and economic conditions inflicted by state-enforced segregation in Mississippi; 2) the human strengths that existed in the black community despite the oppression; 3) the importance of national, progressive organizations' ability to respond to requests for help; and 4) the very personal and complex impact that moving to Mississippi to build a community health clinic can have on the family of a doctor. He unilaterally decides to accept a position, to uproot everyone to leave their friends, home, and schools in urban Boston and bring them all to rural Mound Bayou. The book's style is like a combination of two diaries (a mother's and daughter's) -- but it is more than that. In reality, the daughter's diary was destroyed long ago, so her writing and voice is based on memory. The mother's original diary entries were redone following hours and hours of critical discussion and re-interviewing. It is an engaging narrative of what happens on a very personal level to a woman/wife and girl/daughter caught up in a man/husband-father's professional and political decision making. It is the story also of being the one white family who lives in an all black town. Personally, I was a white New Yorker who served in Mississippi as a Freedom Summer volunteer in 1964 before the Medical Committee on Human Rights and Tufts University started this project. The conditions, aspirations, dilemmas, and people described by Ivester ring true with me. Once I got used to the alternating diary format, I really got drawn in -- and read quickly to the end. There is an unexpected twist before the book ends -- as compelling as in any mystery book. Its description and follow-up leave the reader with a multi-faceted sense -- an end but not closure. If I had any complaint, I would have liked to have a better glimpse at the doctor's feelings and doubts -- it must have been a challenging time for him too. Maybe that's for another book.
2 people found this helpful
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Captivating, Educational and Emotional

Due to my hectic schedule, my intention was to read this recommended book during my subway rides, and perhaps late at night before I fell asleep. Well, I decided to read the first few pages one day and was hooked. It was so frustrating to only read it in small chunks of time. So I set aside a late afternoon into evening period and read the bulk of it. I found it to be captivating, educational and extremely emotional. I'm in awe of what Ms. Ivester's family sacrificed to be of services to others, only to find how much it also enriched their lives. This is so beautifully written, jumping back and forth between the memoirs of Mother and Daughter and ending with a cathartic journey back to Mississippi many years later with her own daughter. I highly recommend this read!
2 people found this helpful
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Lovely, compelling...

I related to this story on many levels, although I have little in common with the actual incidents. Once I picked up "The Outskirts of Hope," I couldn't put it down. I was slightly younger than Jo during the civil rights movement, too young to have such a considered experience, yet always intrigued by the swirling black and white memories I hold from this time. I felt privileged to glimpse the quiet courage and profound compassion of Aura. A shy woman, deposited by her admirable husband in a small town in the Deep South at a time when no one quite knew the rules or how to gracefully embrace the changing times or the unknown danger & anger that could result from ignorance and resistance to change (at the hands of the KKK and others). That the crux of this story revolves around Jo's brutal loss of innocence and the ensuing potential for violence toward the town and the perpetrators as a result, makes my head spin. This is a beautiful story of an heroic family and a loving testament to the community that embraced and allowed them in. Bravo.
2 people found this helpful