Wayne County Reads 2008
OUR FINAL 2008 EVENT:
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 7 p.m.,
Wayne Community College's auditorium, 3000 Wayne Memorial Drive, Goldsboro.
Gene Roberts, a Wayne County native, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of The Race Beat: The Press, the Civil Rights Struggle and the Awakening of a Nation, will talk about his book and its connection to Blood Done Sign My Name.
Refreshments and a book-signing will follow. Roberts’ book will be available for purchase; $26 for hardback, $14 paperback, cash or check only.
This is a free event and open to the public. Roberts has written for the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Raleigh News & Observer, Detroit Free Press, New York Times, and spent 18 years with the Philadelphia Inquirer. He was awarded a Nieman Fellowship by Harvard University, the National Press Club’s “Fourth Estate Award,” and finally after leading the Philadelphia Inquirer to 17 Pulitzer Prizes, received his own Pulitzer when The Race Beat, which he authored with Atlanta Journal Constitution Managing Editor Hank Klibanoff, won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 2007. He teaches at the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, specializing in classes on writing complex stories, newsroom management, and the press’ role in the Civil Rights Movement. He currently lives in New York with his wife Susan. Partners in this year's Wayne County Reads include the Arts Council of Wayne County, Mount Olive College, Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, Wayne Community College, Wayne Country Day School, Wayne County Historical Association, Wayne County Chapter of the UNC Alumni Association, Wayne County Public Library, and Wayne County Public Schools. Financial support for some events has been provided by the Friends of the Library, M and J Foundation, Borden Foundation and the Frank and Sally Borden Foundation.
Roberts was born in Pikeville to a preacher, Eugene L. Roberts Sr., and Margaret Ham Roberts. After graduating from Goldsboro High School in 1950, he attended Mars Hill College from 1950-52, and earned a degree in journalism in 1954 from the University of North Carolina. After a stint in the Army, Roberts earned his first official newspaper job working for the Goldsboro News-Argus.



Previous Wayne County Reads selections were Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird in 2004; Big Fish, by Daniel Wallace of Chapel Hill, 2005; Night, by Elie Wiesel, 2006; and Walking Across Egypt, Clyde Edgerton, 2007.