From The Publisher:
The fatherless black family is one of America's
most damning stereotypes and most troublesome epidemics. Raised in a home with an abusive,
emotionally distant father, journalist Leonard Pitts Jr. didn't know where to turn for
guidance when raising his own son. Where and how do you become "Dad" when you
have grown up without positive role models? Pitts interviewed dozens of black men across
America to pose this question to them. The result is an honest portrait of black
fatherhood that offers much food for thought.
From Kirkus:
Syndicated Miami Herald columnist Pitts offers a thoroughly
absorbing study of the African-American man's struggle to become a competent father in a
society sorely lacking in role models. Detailing his personal efforts to bond with his
children, the author also presents numerous case studies of black men facing similar
difficulties. Sons of abusive or absent men, many members of the younger generation have
to pave their way to productive fatherhood over rough terrain, while exorcising their
progenitors' ghosts. As Pitts details, with 64 percent of African-American children
growing up in single-parent homes, often raised by poor mothers, black youth, especially
males, are at greater risk for delinquency. Lacking male role models that provide love or
discipline, insecure black youth often feel abandoned and adopt the tough bravado of
street culture. Interviewing black males, Pitts encounters too many who have abdicated all
the responsibilities of fatherhood; some aren't even sure how many children they have.
Blaming racism for their predicament, as valid as that may be, in Pitts's view only
perpetuates the cycle of black men who grew up without fathers begetting children who grow
up in single-parent homes. Pitts offers helpful, sensible advice. He urges black men who
have fathered children to locate them and establish a relationship with them and their
mothers. Once they establish that relationship, he says, they should not try to buy kids'
love but instead create structure and stability while praising them, allowing the next
generation to grow up confident. Fathers must also make the children understand the
importance of education, says Pitts; this is especially important in a society ``that
touts the notion that authentic blackness precludes academic excellence.'' A readable,
well-balanced, impassioned account of a dilemma that touches not just the black family,
but all who care about children. ($100,000 ad/promo; author tour).