Tim Tyson Reading

Tim Tyson reads from his memoir, “Blood Done Sign My Name.” Tyson describes his childhood in Oxford, North Carolina, and the murder of an African American man by Tyson’s white neighbors when he was eleven years old.  The men were all acquitted, and several acts of arson were committed in Oxford as a result of the decision.

In a question and answer session, Tyson addresses the event when, performing research for his Master’s thesis many years after the event, he approached the man charged with the murder for an interview.  Tyson discusses that, even after all the years in between, it was apparent that the man still thought he had done no wrong; that he had been defending his family’s honor. 

Tyson, who admits that “this story has been burning a hole in my brain since I was 11,” had thought that he was finished with the story when he submitted his Master’s thesis.  He discusses his decision to release his memoir so many years after the fact, and the attention that his book has received since its publication.  Tyson explained that he felt that the people of Oxford were partly to blame for keeping quiet about the murder, and claimed that events such as the murder were “inevitable” in the “racial caste system” that had been established in America.

Play Audio (59 min.)

In: "Live from Prairie Lights" Audio Archive | Nonfiction

Authors: Tim Tyson

Date Recorded: June 08, 2004

Works Read: "Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story" by Timothy B. Tyson

Program: Live From Prairie Lights

Format: reading

Contributors: Introduction by host Julie Englander.

Topics: race relations, murder, memoir

Play Audio (59 min.)