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Helene Cooper: House at Sugar Beach

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Date and time
Monday, September 15, 2008

Award-winning journalist Helene Cooper discusses her new book, *The House at Sugar Beach: In Search of a Lost African Childhood*, a memoir of her youth in Liberia and what occurred after she and her family were exiled to America.

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Helene Cooper is "Congo," a descendant of two Liberian dynasties traced back to the first ship of freemen that set sail from New York in 1820 to found Monrovia. For years the Cooper daughters, Helene, her sister Marlene, and Eunice blissfully enjoyed the trappings of wealth and advantage. But Liberia was like an unwatched pot of water left boiling on the stove. And on April 12, 1980, a group of soldiers staged a coup d'etat, assassinating President William Tolbert and executing his cabinet. The Coopers and the entire Congo class were now the hunted, being imprisoned, shot, tortured, and raped. After a brutal daylight attack by a ragtag crew of soldiers, Helene, Marlene, and their mother fled Liberia, for America. They left Eunice behind. A world away, Helene tried to assimilate as an American teenager. At the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill she found her passion in journalism, eventually becoming a reporter for the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times.
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