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Woman Heads North to Escape the Indifference of Her Race

All-White Maine Community Becomes a Hopeful Refuge in 1964

MEDIA RELEASE – Promise of the North, a novel by Richard M. Baker, Jr., is being released on Web-e-Books® as part of a rare collection of Baker’s newly edited novels. The Tri-Screen Connection, LLC, publisher and distributor of the e-book, is providing the technology platform and online shopping website for Promise of the North as an e-book.

Promise of the North is written from the perspective of a disenfranchised black couple struggling to overcome the violence and indifference of an inner-city slum where street gangs rule and innocent people suffer for their ethnic heritage. Baker dug deeply from personal empathy to write Promise of the North, inspired by a corresponding outpouring of emotions and events that infuse this work of fiction with social and historical relevance.

Completed in late 1963, Promise of the North barely preceded the final passage of the United States Civil Rights Act of 1964, a defining moment in US racial and gender history that outlawed major forms of discrimination, including segregation. The timing of Promise of the North couldn’t have been more appropriate, for Baker heralded his work as a “protest” novel, and dropped it at the doorstep of a federally-legislated equality movement that has since gripped the country.

Here, the author places a young, determined, married black couple from Washington, D.C. in Baker’s home state of Maine at a time before black migration, thus, in a place where issues of racial integration had yet to be fully addressed.

One might question how white, Maine-bred author Baker could credibly address racial inequalities and present the face of discrimination from his position of cultural isolationism. The answer -- validated by several well-researched novels of social and cultural literature -- is a credit to the brilliant, sensitive, imaginative mind and recognized style of the author. In Promise of the North, Baker plucked two emotionally distraught, determined blacks from an inner-city ghetto and dropped them in the supposedly promised-land of peaceful coexistence in unaffected Portland, Maine. Influenced by current political and social events, and shaped by the opinions, perceptions and behaviors of social contacts, Baker was sensitized to an imaginative view of what it would be like to drift into a closed culture.

Promise of the North uncovers important and unfortunate truisms of racism, among them, fear, unfamiliarity, and ethnic stereotyping. The good-hearted Jacksons are challenged at every turn by habitually offensive practices that, for lack of direct cultural engagement if nothing else, hadn’t changed much in a hundred years. The North may have won the Civil War and signaled its moral promise with the Emancipation Proclamation, but remnants of the black/white cultural divide in the far North were conveniently surrendered to its seclusion.

Promise of the North is significant for this very reason. The novel dispenses lasting pain by demonstrating that the wounded bee of racism retains its sting after a century of institutional dormancy. Indeed, Promise of the North awakens the memory to blind holdouts of segregation – paradoxically, in a land where statues were erected to those who died in the name of abolition, equality and union.

Promise of the North delivers a potent, thrilling and modern-day essay on multiculturalism, providing an ever-lasting marker on the personal origins of anti-racial behavior despite long-standing political and societal rejection of intolerance.

Web-e-Book® Availability

Promise of the North is viewable in licensed Web-e-Books® format available from The Tri-Screen Connection and is compatible with most any Internet browser capable desktop, laptop, e-reader, mobile smart phone, or similarly equipped Apple®, Windows®, Android®, and Linux® PCs and mobile tablets at:

www.web-e-books.com

Priced at US $4.95 - read on-line, no download or installation required.

About The Tri-Screen Connection

The Tri-Screen Connection represents a launch pad for broad adoption of new-media communications services, including digital content and publishing. Our publishing strategy is to satisfy the market for literature of excellence that provides reflective insight to a wide range of human experiences.

Media Downloads:

Promise of the North
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R M Baker Jr. Outside
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R M Baker Jr. at Desk
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Media Blurbs:

“She stood as before, as if a million miles away, and hadn’t once lifted the cigarette to her lips. Suddenly, he shivered with fear. He could smell the wrong and was sure something was.”

“How could one he loved so much and had loved him so hard have changed so completely? He wouldn’t have believed that any evil on this earth could have done it to her.”

“We shouldn’t pack in like we do,” Corinna had said. “The only solution to the whole rotten problem is for us Negroes to split up and spread out, live in every town and city there is.”

“Why the strange look? He wondered as he passed the desk clerk with a nod. It’s the sight of ebony. I guess. Well, they look pretty damned odd to me, like bleached pricks, most of them, skinny and fat, limp and sad.”

“Immediately his eyes went down. He knew what she meant, that she had every right to ask and that she thought he was. But am I? Can a black man in a white fix be called weak?”