Susan Goldman Rubin is the author of Brown v. Board of Education: A Fight for Simple Justice, a book for older kids and young adults. Her many other books include Roy's House, Hot Pink, and Freedom Summer. She teaches in the UCLA Extension Writers' Program, and she lives in Malibu, California.
Q: Why did you decide to focus on Brown v. Board of
Education in your new book?
A: I knew about it, and that it is a landmark case, one of
the most important of the 20th century, but I came to it in a
curious way.
I do a lot of nonfiction, but I was an artist. I grew up in
New York, and went to the School of Music and Art. I also do picture books and
novels.
I was working on a novel set in the 1950s, based on my own
experiences as an art student in New York. I wanted the character of the girl’s
older brother to be involved in civil rights. What would a Jewish young man in
New York be doing on civil rights?
I had done a book on Freedom Summer. I was struck by the
people who had gone South to do something. I wanted this character to do
something like that.
I came across the name June Shagaloff Alexander, who worked
with Mr. Marshall. She was wonderful in filling me in. She worked with him
during the struggle on Brown v. Board of Education. I became so caught up I almost
forgot about my novel! She game me suggested reading.
I contacted the Brown Foundation and they wrote back. Many
of us didn’t realize there were five cases involved. It wasn’t just Brown v.
Board of Education. They wanted me to correct the myth that it was just one
case.
The fact that their father’s name was at the top was just a
fluke. All the plaintiffs were women. The 1950s, being a girl in the ‘50s I can
understand, they wanted a man’s name at the top of the list. I was caught up in
the research and couldn’t stop.
The Brown sisters gave me a reading list to get started, and
some contact information. They wouldn’t allow me to interview [them] because it
was for profit…but they did give me contact information, and I was able to talk
to plaintiffs. It was amazing.
Research is like a treasure hunt. I thought, if I didn’t
know there were five cases—in 1954 I was in my senior year in high school—how
come we didn’t know about this? In New York, we had a pretty good education. It
got me excited. Many people I spoke to didn’t know there were five cases. The
only ones who did were law students…
[I read] the book Simple Justice by Richard Kluger. Every
time I was on a plane, I would take it with me. After one flight from Los
Angeles to New York, I was reading it the whole way, I asked a gentleman behind
me to lift down my suitcase. He asked what it was I was reading with such
interest the whole flight!...I couldn’t wait to distill what I was finding and
add it to my own interviews.
You’d think that would be the end of the book, when the
Supreme Court makes the decision unanimously in favor of ending segregation in
schools—that’s it! But it wasn’t it. There’s still segregation…the fight goes
on.
Q: What do you see as the legacy of Brown v. Board of Education?
A: That segregation is absolutely unacceptable. The older I
get, the more determined I am to do what I can to change attitudes.
Thurgood Marshall said that unless our children begin to
learn together, there’s little hope our people can live together...Charles
Houston, his dean and colleague, said, Do not lose heart if victory doesn’t
come at once. Reading about the struggles of these lawyers, you just don’t give
up…
We still have racism and segregation in this country. I’m
hoping to try to change attitudes. Psychiatrists would testify in court about
how segregation was [harmful]. We had a better mix in our public schools in New
York. I feel that’s so missing in many areas today.
Q: What age group do you think would particularly appreciate
the book?
A: I have many grandchildren. I have grandchildren from A to
Z. I happen to have two from two stepsons, a girl and a boy who are both 11 and
a half. Ten and up is the age group we’re aiming at….[but] it’s really for
people of all ages. My husband has been reading it, and my son. I’m sending the
book to adult friends.
Then there’s the photo research—I’m hoping it would appeal
to kids.
Q: Yes, how did you do all the photo research?
A: It is like detective work! I had an actual person who is
my new best friend at the Library of Congress! She said, Don’t worry, just call
me directly!
[Some] images were very hard to get. You’d think the
National Archives are in Washington—wrong! They’re all over the place. One
morning at 6 I got a call from Philadelphia. It was a thrilling call—a woman
said, We have what you want right here!
The cases in Delaware are about two girls. There’s a
charming photo, posted on the Smithsonian website. I thought, I’ll get the
photo from the Smithsonian. But they are not the rights holder. You have to
contact the person or institution who has the rights. They mentioned the name
of the son, but they had no record of it. I called the newspaper in which her
obituary had appeared, and finally tracked down her son, who lives in Arizona.
I was so excited!
Q: You’ve mentioned some things that surprised you in the
course of your research. Are there any others you’d like to discuss?
A: Yes—the resistance of people in Virginia to accept the
ruling and implement it. I didn’t realize Thurgood Marshall had to go back to
the Supreme Court to see [how to implement it] and meanwhile many kids were
missing out on a good education.
I have family in Virginia. I have no ill feelings toward
Virginia. But I found the governing people in Virginia were so against this
important Supreme Court ruling that they shut down schools for six years. I
thought, Oh, my God, I didn’t think you could resist a ruling. It was shocking
to me. That generation of people really missed out.
I tried to write it like a thriller. I wanted it to be a
page-turner. You bring your narrative skills hoping any reader will say, What
happens next?...
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m working on a number of books. They’re in different
stages. The quilts of Gee's Bend—they’re works of art. The women of Gee’s Bend,
descendants of enslaved people, never thought of them as art. They are works of
art!
In recent years, they’ve been collected by the Arnett
family. Museums have realized the beauty of these quilts. My book will be out
in the spring of 2017 to coincide with the exhibit [at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art].
I am doing a biography of Maya Lin. She is in the news a lot
these days. She let me interview her. This will be published by Chronicle in
the spring or winter of 2017.
I’m also doing a book on Coco Chanel—that’s a change of
pace… I did a book, Hot Pink, on Elsa Schiaparelli. This will be out in 2018.
She’s a fascinating character…
I’m now researching a biography of Paul Robeson, the great
black singer and activist, coming out with Calkins Creek in 2018. That is
fascinating to research.
Q: Anything else you’d especially like people to know about
your Brown v. Board of Education book?
A: I would like them to know more about the marvelous
lawyers, black and white…the work all these people did, and about the many
plaintiffs. Some of the photos that meant the most to me—there are adorable
children lined up, and they’re the plaintiffs.
I would like them to look at my bibliography, at some of the
people’s memoirs. We know about Ruby Bridges, but I didn’t know much about the
Milford Eleven…I would like people to look at the bibliography and read more
and follow up.
It can be marvelous to hear stories the way they wrote it.
That’s why I also have an extensive bibliography. Not everyone wants to read
Simple Justice!
I want them to visit museums if they can. I never had the
chance to visit the museum at Monroe Elementary [in Topeka]. We listed sites in
the book, so if you happen to be in the area [you can visit]. I’d love for
readers to visit museums and learn more!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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