"For 40 years, justice had gone undone in the brutal murder of four young girls in the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church. Forty years of pain and hurt for the families of those young girls and their community. Forty years of the Klan laughing at justice, getting away with the act of a coward. Doug Jones said no more. Justice had to be done. Those young girls deserved it. Their families deserved it. The community needed it.
It took courage, commitment, and persistence. And--maybe most of all--heart." --former vice president Joe Biden "This book describes the painful sacrifice that was required, and may be called for again, for us to move toward true democracy in America. Facing the truth of our dark past with honesty and humility is the only way this nation can heal these deep wounds. But knowing the truth Jones shares in this book can set this nation free to earnestly build a more perfect union." --Rep. John Lewis "Doug Jones has proven himself adept at getting right with history against tall odds, whether it's in his prosecution of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing case or his election to the U. S.
Senate. Bending Toward Justice is his riveting inside account of arguably the most important cold case prosecution in civil rights history, and a crucial contribution to our understanding of where we are--and he is--today." --Diane McWhorter, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama--The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution "Lively.The bulk of this compelling account focuses on that extraordinary trial and 2001 conviction. A useful firsthand account of a series of civil rights landmarks, with some additional analysis of our current political climate." -- Kirkus Review "A deeply affecting portrait of the devastation wrought by the 16th Street Church bombing and the enduring blight and bitterness it left in the black community." -- Booklist Review "This book ought to be studied by national Democrats looking to rescue populist idealism from its Trumpian captivity." --Howell Raines, New York Times Book Review " This poignant and powerful story tracks changes in Southern life since the 1960s, uncovering hard truths to correct America's moral compass with an understanding of the need for activism and political discourse to achieve social justice.
" --Thomas J. Davis, Library Journal Review.