As an African American woman born in 1943, Maxine Childress Brown possessed a unique vantage point to witness the transformative events in her parents’ lives. Both came from the South -- her father, Herbert Childress, from Nashville, TN, and her mother, Thomasina Brown, from Concord, NC. The oldest of three daughters, Maxine was fascinated by her parents’ stories. She marveled at how they raised a well-respected, middle-class family in the midst of segregation with the added challenge of being deaf. Her parents met in Washington, DC, where they married and settled down. Her father worked as a shoe repairman for $65 per week for more than 15 years. A gifted seamstress, her mother gave up sewing to clean houses. Because of their modest means, Maxine and her sisters lived more than modest lives. When Maxine’s tonsils became infected, her parents could not afford the operation to have them removed. For her high school prom, her mother bought her a dress on credit because she had no time to sew. Herbert Childress showed great love for his young daughters, but events turned him to bitterness and to drink. Throughout all, Thomasina encouraged her girls, always urging them to excel. She demanded their honest best with her signature phrase, her flat hand raised from her mouth straight up in the air, “on the beat of truth.” On the Beat of Truth is utterly engaging. The intimate details about the author’s family life were presented in a dynamic storytelling mode that compelled me to recall similar moments of amazement and discovery from my own childhood experiences. I could not put this book down. Take your own journey and let the stories tug at your heart! -- Carolyne S. Blount, Executive Editor ― About...Time Magazine (Childress Brown's) book is a candid and vivid memoir of the challenges and triumphs that she and her sisters, Shirley and Barbara, faced as hearing children... On the Beat of Truth has been well received ...by national and local educators of deaf students. -- Meredith Low ― Democrat and Chronicle Maxine Childress Brown, a child of deaf parents, understands how lack of education and access affects the opportunities available to deaf families. Her candid and poignant memoir reminds us that the deaf community’s achievements in the struggle for equal recognition, rights, and self-determination owe a debt of gratitude to those who came before us. I am delighted to recommend her book. -- Gerard Buckley, President, National Technical Institute for the Deaf Maxine Childress Brown is an RID-certified interpreter and former assistant professor at Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY, and the State University of New York at Geneseo. Used Book in Good Condition