Howard Griffin

‘Rescuer Like Me’

12/27/2011
Staff Writer

Two generations ago John Howard Griffin was a household name in the United States, admired in some places, hated in others. His fame/notoriety grew out of his landmark book, “Black Like Me,” which documented six weeks the white native of Dallas had spent traveling around the Deep South, with chemically darkened skin, posing as an African-American (known then as a Negro) laborer.

Robert Bonazzi, an expert on John Howard Griffin, said the writer had a “decade of blindness” about the experience of blacks in
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