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Multiple times a day, in cities across the US and beyond, a simple yet powerful message is repeated by the well-meaning, the ill-informed, and the bigoted: “don’t go” – avoid at all costs those Black and Brown disinvested neighborhoods that have become bywords for social disorder and urban decay.

This book is a collection of intimate stories and evocative photos that uncover the hidden influence of both subtle and overt “don’t go” messages and the segregation they perpetuate in Chicago. Told by everyday people to Tonika Lewis Johnson and Maria Krysan – a Black artist and a White academic who met through their shared passion for anti-segregation work – the stories paint a rich picture of life in a segregated city.

One by one, the storytellers upend pessimism with candid, deeply personal, humorous, and heartbreaking tales, and with novel ideas for simple actions that can serve as antidotes to both racism and “place-ism.” 

By inviting readers into the lives of regular people who have ignored the warning to stay away from “don’t go” neighborhoods or who live in those very same neighborhoods, the stories in Don’t Go illuminate the devastating consequences of racial segregation and disinvestment as well as the inevitable rewards of coming together.


“The first-person accounts in this book are a powerful reminder that segregation isn’t just about points on a map; it’s about the geography of feelings inside those growing up within its shadows. Don’t Go lays this bare, while also giving space for hope that change will come — and how.”

Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Harvard University


“Every one of us, no matter how much we’re committed to racial justice and believe in racial equality, has stereotypes that we need to overcome. If you think you’re immune from the stereotypes of ‘dangerous Black neighborhoods,’ you should read this book.”

Richard Rothstein, author of The Color of Law


“Don’t Go is a remarkable piece of work that can change how we all live. The human voices and engaging, innovative approach do more than a mountain of data ever could to bridge racial barriers. This is a powerful and compelling book.”

Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University

THE AUTHORS

Tonika Lewis Johnson is a photographer and multi-media artist, and creator of the Folded Map Project. She is recipient of the 2024 Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship and one of Chicago Magazine’s 2017 Chicagoans of the Year.
@tonikaj


Maria Krysan is LAS Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of Illinois Chicago, and co-author of the multiple award-winning book Cycle of Segregation.
@mariakrysan

Watch WTTW’s 2022 news coverage to learn more about the story of the Don’t Go project, and meet some of the storytellers featured in the book.


Read Pulitzer-Prize-winner Mary Schmich’s Chicago Tribune 2019 column about Tonika’s experience at Northwestern University. This column and Tonika’s social media posts inspired Chicagoans to share their Don’t Go stories with Tonika. 


Watch the 2019 clip that shows the moment that started it all. Tonika posted this video on her social media, where Mary Schmich (and thousands others) saw it. 


Check out this January 2025 event at Northwestern University, on the occasion of the publication of the Don’t Go book.  It’s a moderated conversation between Tonika, Maria, and two of the Don’t Go storytellers, Leslie and Caroline. 

Buy The Book

The book is available (audiobook, e-reader, and hard copy) wherever books are sold!  We encourage you to support your favorite neighborhood independent bookstore or place your order at bookshop.org. 

If you purchase at Polity Books use the promo code JK30 to get 30% off. 

If you feel so inclined, we’d love for you to post a review at your favorite book review site (Goodreads, Linkedin, Amazon, etc.).