The Klansman's Son cover art

The Klansman's Son

My Journey from White Nationalism to Antiracism

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The Klansman's Son

By: R. Derek Black
Narrated by: R. Derek Black
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About this listen

From the former heir apparent to White nationalism, an astonishing memoir of a childhood built on fear, and of breaking from a community of hate

Derek Black was raised to take over the White nationalist movement in the United States. Derek’s father, Don Black, was a former Grand Wizard in the Ku Klux Klan and started Stormfront, the internet’s first White supremacist website—Derek built the kids’ page—and David Duke was a mentor. Racist hatred, though often wrapped up in respectability and American history, was all Derek knew. It was their inheritance, their community, their identity.

Then, while in college in 2013, Derek publicly renounced White nationalism and apologized for their actions and the suffering that they had caused. The majority of their family stopped speaking to Derek, and they disappeared into academia, convinced that they had done so much harm that there was no place for them in public life. But in 2016, as Derek watched the rise of Donald Trump, they recognized language and arguments they had once helped cultivate—and they knew that they couldn’t stay silent.

The Klansman’s Son is a thoughtful, insightful, and moving account of a singular life, with important lessons for our contentious times. The place where Derek’s world turned upside down—New College of Florida—has become a prominent battleground in the fight over race, gender, and education, and few understand the ideology, motivations, or tactics of the White nationalist movement like Derek. As coded language and creeping authoritarianism spread the ideas of White nationalists, this is an essential book from a powerful voice.

“Your family or your soul? That is what the choice finally came down to for Derek Black, whose searching memoir has much to teach us all. Surprises and insights abound in this page-turner composed with candor and grace. For instance, why do White power recruiters focus on those who say, ‘I’m not a racist, but … ’? The Klansman’s Son is a must-read for all who hunger for hope in these cruel times.”—Nancy MacLean, author of Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America and Behind the Mask of Chivalry: The Making of the Second Ku Klux Klan

©2024 Roland Derek Black (P)2024 Recorded Books
Activists Racism & Discrimination

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Confusing

I couldn’t finish this book. Not because it wasn’t an interesting relevant and important story.Maybe because I’m older but I lost the thread of the story once the author started to refer to a person in the plural. I understand that this is the preference of some people and I’m trying to change with the times but it just became confusing. The author would be was referring to a person in a conversation and then all of a sudden it seemed they were more people in the story and in fact it was just one person with the plural pronoun. It completely detracted from the story being told and I lost the thread and decided not to finish the book. I guess I have to go back to the Classics.

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