Blood Done Sign My Name

Blood Done Sign My Name (2004) is a historical memoir written by Timothy B. Tyson. He explores the 1970 murder of Henry D. Marrow, a black man in Tyson's then hometown of Oxford, North Carolina. The murder is described as the result of the complicated collision of the Black Power movement and the white backlash against public school integration and other changes brought by the civil rights movement.

Blood Done Sign My Name
AuthorTimothy Tyson
LanguageEnglish
GenreAutobiography; historical nonfiction
PublisherCrown
Publication date
May 18, 2004
Media typePrint (hardcover & paperback)
Pages368
ISBN0-609-61058-9 (hardcover)
OCLC53019249
975.6/535/00496073 22
LC ClassF264.O95 T97 2004

Since 2004, the book has sold 160,000 copies. It has earned several awards: the Grawemeyer Award in Religion from the Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, which had a $200,000 prize, the Southern Book Award for Nonfiction from the Southern Book Critics Circle, the Christopher Award, and the North Caroliniana Book Award from the North Caroliniana Society. It was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill selected the book for its 2005 summer reading program.

The book was adapted as a movie by the same name, released in 2010. Entertainment Weekly ranked it on a "must see" list.

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