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An Unplanned Life

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A major autobiography of a remarkable life that broke down racial barriers, transformed institutions, and energized the struggle for justice, by the former president of the Ford Foundation
"Frank has that quality of honesty and authenticity and people trusted him . . . and because very disparate people trusted him, he could bring them together across their differences."
—Gloria Steinem

Franklin Thomas was one of the most influential people of our time. As former president of the Ford Foundation (the first African American to hold this position), former president of the Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation (the first community development organization of its kind), member of countless corporate boards, and a key player in facilitating the end of the apartheid era in South Africa, Thomas shaped public policy, philanthropy, and the movement for human rights for over half a century.

An Unplanned Life offers an insider's account of some of the most crucial transformations of the contemporary era: efforts to rebuild America's cities, struggles to reform philanthropy, and the quest to establish a global order based on human rights and racial equity. As a story of firsts, Franklin's memoir also chronicles a formative era, when a generation of African Americans first broke through into the halls of power, navigating complicated and sometimes treacherous cultural and political currents.

Much of Franklin Thomas's life was marked by his desire to stay out of the spotlight, and to let his accomplishments speak for themselves. Now, in An Unplanned Life, we have Thomas's full story, in all of its nuance, drama, and richly narrated detail.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 10, 2022
      Thomas (1934–2021), the first Black American to lead a major philanthropic organization, details a life dedicated to helping others in his posthumous memoir. Raised in Brooklyn, N.Y., Thomas was taught by his parents to value education and to believe that “if you could imagine it, you could accomplish it.” After serving in the Air Force and graduating from Columbia Law School, he forged an impressive career that spanned six decades, beginning as an attorney for the Federal Housing and Home Finance Agency in 1963. In the late 1960s, Sen. Robert Kennedy recruited Thomas for the Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation. His success as the group’s president didn’t go unnoticed, which led to directorial roles at major organizations including the Rockefeller Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Thomas’s narrative is written in exacting detail, and though his heavy focus on his professional trajectory doesn’t give readers a full picture of him as a person, his sense of conviction and humility easily come through (“I didn’t define myself as a leader,” he writes in response to a newspaper announcement about his appointment as the seventh president of the Ford Foundation). This portrait of selfless civic duty will encourage readers to think beyond the limits of their ambitions.

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  • English

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