ABSTRACT

From the time that he ran away to sea at sixteen, until he graduated from the University of Washington, Horace R. Cayton was a messman on a freighter, an unknowing handyman in an Alaskan brothel, a juvenile delinquent and inmate of a reform school, a dock worker and steward on a passenger liner, and a deputy in the sheriff's office of King County, Washington. Born in Seattle, a city then uniquely free from racial tensions and prejudices, Cayton found the privileged, secure, middle-class position of his well-to-do parents ineffectual against the gradual spread of racism that was sweeping America. His disarmingly honest autobiography is the ever-absorbing record of an intelligent, sensitive, and proud man's attempts to find identity in a confusing and conflicting chaos of black and white, in a nation that, although dedicated to equality, somehow managed to deny this ideal by almost every action. Although his turbulent life was complicated by the color barrier--often resulting in reverses and frustrations that have rendered him close to a breakdown--this alone is not what makes Cayton's book such captivating reading. Wholly lacking in self-pity or special pleading, Horace Cayton has written a personal narrative of unfailing interest on any number of scores, a book that ranks with the best of American autobiographical writing. For it manages to remain highly critical without once resorting to bitterness; to be filled with hope, though not always hopeful; and brims with compassion and bemused and acute insights into a troubled society. It is a telling, almost poetic tribute to the resiliency of black culture.

chapter 1|40 pages

Childhood in the West

chapter 2|34 pages

The Die Is Cast

chapter 3|24 pages

A Boys Reformation

chapter 4|28 pages

Labor Pains

chapter 5|22 pages

Deputy to the Sheriff of King County

chapter 6|26 pages

Marriage and Career

chapter 7|13 pages

To Be in Chicago in the Thirties

chapter 8|18 pages

Tuskegee Was Quite a Place

chapter 9|24 pages

Escape to Europe

chapter 11|13 pages

The Dark Inner Landscape

chapter 12|21 pages

In Fear and Trembling

chapter 13|16 pages

A Picnic with Sinclair Lewis

chapter 14|19 pages

The Crack-up

chapter 15|26 pages

Blood Makes Good Paint

chapter 16|18 pages

The World Is Now the Scene

chapter 17|30 pages

The Battle Is Being Won