"Although Homer G. Phillips was in existence for only 42 years, it has become a legend for the major role it played in the development of the Ville community. The book brings to life the story of a successful black hospital operated by African Americans."--Dr. John A. Wright, former superintendent of schools in St. Louis
"Candace O'Connor has written an inspiring, though at times despairing, account about a vital part of St. Louis's history. It not only relates a powerful story about Black St. Louis but provides rich information about Blacks and the medical profession. All St. Louisans should be grateful for this book."--Gerald Early, Washington University, editor of Ain't But a Place: An Anthology of African American Writings about St. Louis
"I grew up in the Ville, within walking distance of Homer G. Climbing the Ladder, Chasing the Dream: The History of Homer G. Philips Hospital is not just the history of an iconic hospital, it is a walk through time of the history of healthcare for African Americans. In the age of COVID, it is not only a poignant reminder of what can be done to deal with the healthcare inequities that people of color in America face, it is also a challenge to this generation to do more."--Ambassador Charles Stith, Chairman of The Pula Group, author of For Such a Time as This: African Leadership Challenges
"Climbing the Ladder, Chasing the Dream is a thorough and engaging history of St. Louis's Homer G. Phillips Hospital, one of the most important Black institutions in twentieth-century America. But the book is much more than that. Through this book, Candace O'Connor provides important perspectives on a variety of topics, including the Great Migration, the causes and consequences of segregation and integration, and the overall issue of race in modern America."--Gary R. Kremer, Executive Director of the State Historical Society of Missouri, author of This Place of Promise: A Historian's Perspective on 200 Years of Missouri History
"You read Climbing the Ladder, Chasing the Dream and wonder, dazed, why no one put all this rich material together before. At once intimate and sweeping, the book is the first full history of St. Louis's most extraordinary, embattled, and glorious hospital."--The Common Reader
"Provides an eloquent account of the solidarity and vitality of African American communities before integration."--Kansas History
"Candace O'Connor's Climbing the Ladder, Chasing the Dream: The History of Homer G. Phillips Hospital is a long-awaited addition to the literature on Black hospitals (still inadequate, I think). Furthermore, O'Connor, a journalist and nonfiction author, understands the importance of placing a Black hospital at the center of her monograph."--Missouri Historical Review
"Through interviews excavating the memories of those who studied and worked at "Homer G.," O'Connor brings the narrative of a successful hospital and its attendant auxiliaries to life (p. xiii). However, Climbing the Ladder, Chasing the Dream is more than a history of Homer G. It also provides significant perspectives on numerous themes including the Great Migration, the causes of systemic racism, the aftereffects of racial desegregation, and the overall spectrum of race relations in America from the late 1930s to the late 1970s. . . . O'Connor's Climbing the Ladder, Chasing the Dream should be considered by those who have an interest in the historical chronicle of African American medical and nursing education, hospitals, and the impact of public health policy on communities."--Journal of Southern History