But the traditional publishing assumption that blacks don't buy books turned out to be mostly self-fulfilling prophecy.
A black sanitation worker who refused to be identified said: "They just don't want blacks to buy houses here."
Self-hating blacks like him can buy all the non-black women they like.
In the nineteenth century, many blacks managed to clear and buy their own farms in the bottomlands.
After the civil war, freed blacks bought land in the area and started farms.
Across the United States, blacks in this decade have bought their first homes faster than any other racial group.
More than 100 blacks have bought equity in the three partnerships.
One white woman said her family had to eat hamburger while the blacks bought steaks with their food stamps.
This ratio is changing as blacks buy land in the black townships.
Whites still flee neighborhoods when blacks buy houses or register for school.