| Eugene Robinson uses his twice-weekly column in The Washington Post to pick American society apart and then put it back together again in unexpected, and revelatory, new ways. To do this job of demolition and reassembly, Robinson relies on a large and varied tool kit: energy, curiosity, elegant writing, and the wide-ranging experience of a life that took him from childhood in the segregated South – on what they called the “colored” side of the tracks – to the heights of American journalism. | ||
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| Coal to Cream: A Black Man's Journey Beyond...
by Eugene Robinson | Last Dance in Havana
by Eugene Robinson |
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Eugene Robinson



