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APRIL 1, 2025. PRE-ORDER NOW. FREE SHIPPING IN NORTH AMERICA
Eyes Have Seen, From Mississippi to Montreal is a memoir about growing up black in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. How family, good neighbors and the cultural underpinnings of Newman Quarters kept Fred Anderson grounded and capable of embracing the racial and tyrannical crosswinds of Hattiesburg and the south of the 1960s. With electric candour, Anderson writes about joining the Mississippi civil rights movement at the age of fifteen, the burgeoning anti-Vietnam War activism, and reimagining the underground railroad to Canada.
“Little did I know that the internal and public outcomes of the waning Mississippi Freedom Summer and my personal fate would collide with my ancestral struggles and hurl me into the narrative of runaway fugitives seeking exile in Canada.”
It is also a story of exile, of living under the assumed name of Clifford Gaston from 1966 until 1977 when amnesty was granted to draft dodgers, of dodging arrest and deportation, of forging a new home in another country so far away from family and friends.
Fred Anderson was born in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He left home at an early age to join the Civil Rights Movement, becoming a field secretary for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the Mississippi Delta, Alabama, and Southwest Georgia. He fled in the winter of 1966, to Montreal as a Vietnam war resister. He attended Sir George Williams University and was awarded the 1973 Board of Governors Medal for Creative Expression in Literary Arts. Fred was instrumental in co-founding two black research institutes and a Black literary forum and is a member of the Quebec Writers’ Federation. He was employed as program manager, overseeing gender-specific therapeutic interventions for several English-speaking rehabilitation centres for adolescent girls. Later, he would assume the same responsibility in Northern Quebec in the service of Inuit and Cree adolescent girls. Fred Anderson lives in Montreal.
Reviews and praise
“Fred Anderson’s story is a gripping tale that maps the terrain of Black family and exile at a moment of a certain Black becoming. The Civil Rights Movement and Black Power continue to reverberate for all of us and Anderson’s intimate account of his experience through the movement and exile to Canada is not just one of triumph but a reckoning with a past that is not yet behind us. Anderson’s memoir is a guide to what we must now live too. His account of the 1960s spans Mississippi to Montreal and Black metropolitan life and politics is laid bare. We need accounts like these to fill the voids in the official archives and more importantly to puncture the myths of national difference. Read this memoir and sit with its many truths and its difficult triumphs!”
— Rinaldo Walcott is Professor and Chair of Africana and American Studies at the University at Buffalo. His last book is The Long Emancipation: Moving Toward Black Freedom.
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