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A much-needed counterweight to the endless streams of publications that feature golden older people enjoying wealth and good health.
An excellent work.
A very thoughtful and clear picture of growing old in the inner city.

A Different Shade of Gray
Midlife and Beyond in the Inner City
paperback
$19.95 / £12.99
—WILLIAM JULIUS WILSON
In a book that Robert B. Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, called “provocative and insightful . . . combining revealing details about specific people with thoughtful analysis of the trends that have shaped their lives,” Katherine S. Newman, former dean of social sciences at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and award-winning author of No Shame in My Game, exposes a growing but largely invisible group of Americans: the aging urban underclass.
While an increasing portion of the U.S. population is about to retire—the number of Americans over age sixty-five is expected to double to seventy million in the next thirty years—the experience of middle and old age, as Newman shows, differs dramatically for whites and minorities, for the middle class and the poor, and for those living in the suburbs versus the city. Focusing on the lives of elderly African Americans and Latinos in pockets of New York City where wages are low, crime is often high, and the elderly have few support systems they can rely on, A Different Shade of Gray provides “a well-documented portrait of a little-examined group” (Kirkus Reviews).
Katherine S. Newman is the Malcolm Forbes ‘41 Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at Princeton University. She is the author of several books on urban poverty, including No Shame in My Game, which won the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Book Prize and the Sidney Hillman Book Award in 2000, and Chutes and Ladders (forthcoming in 2006). She lives in New York City and Princeton, New Jersey.
Spring 2006
paperback
6 1/8 x 9 1/4, 320 pages
978-1-59558-081-8
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