A new book focuses on a queer, Black, WWII-era translator who risked safety for love cover art

A new book focuses on a queer, Black, WWII-era translator who risked safety for love

A new book focuses on a queer, Black, WWII-era translator who risked safety for love

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About a decade ago, professor and historian Ethelene Whitmire was presenting research on the experiences of African Americans living in Denmark. At that talk, she met – by chance – a relative of Reed Peggram, one of her research subjects. That relative directed Whitmire to a trove of letters written by Peggram, a queer, Black translator who found himself in Europe on the eve of World War II. In today’s episode, Whitmire joins NPR’s Scott Simon for a conversation about her book The Remarkable Life of Reed Peggram, the project that emerged from his family’s archive.


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