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Author of Inaugural Ballers, Singled Out, Games of Deception and Strong Inside

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“Dixie” Sounded The Same in Nashville …

July 25, 2014

Forty-six years ago today, July 25, 1968, Perry Wallace addressed Vanderbilt chancellor Alexander Heard and other administrators in a specially called meeting of the university’s Human Relations Committee. Earlier that spring, Wallace had completed his first year of varsity basketball, becoming the first African-American basketball player in SEC history. Wallace’s remarks were equal parts poetic, raw, painful and helpful, providing such a fascinating look at his state-of-mind at this point in his pioneering stint that I devote nearly all of Chapter 23 of Strong Inside to this scene. Discovering the transcript of his remarks – typed by Wallace himself in 1968 — was one of my most exciting moments in the eight years I worked on the book.

hrc

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  • “In a magnificently reported, nuanced
    but raw account of basketball and racism in the South during the 1960s, Andrew Maraniss tells the story of Perry Wallace’s struggle, loneliness, perseverance and eventual self-realization. A rare story about physical and intellectual courage that is both shocking and triumphant. ”

    Bob Woodward, Washington Post associate editor and author

Watch Andrew Maraniss talk about his inspiration to write Strong Inside, featuring archival footage of Perry Wallace in action.
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