Our Song: A Memoir of Love and Race

by Lynda Smith Hoggan

Rural Pennsylvania, 1972—a time of civil rights, the Vietnam War, and defiant counterculture youth challenging their traditional parents.

Lynda is a free-spirited white student of poetry, peyote, and peaceful protest. JT is a gifted black athlete recruited from the inner city. Their schools are hours apart, but that doesn’t stop their intense chemistry from igniting a sensuous romance. Without email, cell phones, or video chat apps, the young lovers fill the void between occasional weekends together in the only way they can: with long letters, often laced with lyrics from the songs that shaped the ‘60’s and ‘70’s. But both are caught in multiple struggles: racist parents, the interference of a jealous friend, and the grip of a prior boyfriend. Ultimately, the delicate fabric that binds them unravels.

Now, four decades later, Lynda and JT may have another chance. Can they take it?

This sensual memoir by human sexuality professor Lynda Smith Hoggan lays bare the raw contradictions between social expectations and the heart’s desires—and leaves readers pondering what love might look like in a world where we are truly free.

“Gorgeous. Sexy. Heartbreaking. Impossible to put down. Our Song is a lyrical portrait of an era—the 1960s and 1970s—when it seemed that peace, love, and music would change the world. It is also the portrait of two college-aged lovers, a white woman and a black man. Hoggan writes with aching honesty about the enduring toxins of racism, poverty, and family dysfunction, and of her own mistakes. Our Song is a real and tragic love story that echoes long after the words fade.”
SUSAN J. TWEIT, Sarton Award-winning author of Bless the Birds, Living with Love in a Time of Dying

“Love isn’t always enough. Lynda Smith Hoggan has captured a poignant snapshot of a long-ago time. If you were there, this tender, sometimes funny, often heartbreaking memoir will take you back. If you were not, it will show you what you missed.”
BONNIE HEARN HILL, author of The River Below and host at KMPH’s Great Day Book Club

OURSONG

Art in the Time of Unbearable Crisis: Women Writers Respond to the Call

Edited by Stephanie Raffelock

Lynda’s essay is “I Wrote My Will Last Night.”

“These are brave and beautiful and riveting pieces that reinforce the absolute truth that art indeed saves lives, and to make art in the midst of war or crisis or any form of turbulence is triumphant.”
AMY FERRIS, author of Marrying George Clooney and editor of Shades of Blue.

“Want a perfect example of ‘show, don’t tell’? It’s this book. Show us that art matters in times of despair. Show us the power of a publisher on a mission to raise women’s voices. Show us those women coming together to create something beautiful. It’s all here in these pages.”
JENNIE NASH, founder and CEO of Author Accelerator

“This extraordinary anthology reminds us that, in the end, love always triumphs. It’s a gift for each reader and a much-needed balm for our collective heart and soul.”
DEBRA LANDWEHR ENGLE, author of The Only Little Prayer You Need and Twenty

Dedicated to the indomitable spirit of the Ukrainian people. Any and all royalties from Art in the Time of Unbearable Crisis will be donated to World Central Kitchen.

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