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Morningside : The 1979 Greensboro Massacre and the Struggle for an American City's Soul
Morningside : The 1979 Greensboro Massacre and the Struggle for an American City's Soul
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Author(s): Shetterly, Aran
Shetterly, Aran Robert
ISBN No.: 9780062858214
Pages: 480
Year: 202410
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 41.39
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Morningside is a riveting account of a critical chapter in our nation's racial history. Aran Shetterly takes us along for a wild ride -- Nelson and Joyce Johnson's decades -- long struggle to achieve justice for America's poor and marginalized who are living on the 'outskirts of hope.' From the Klan's deadly ambush, to the quest for truth and reconciliation, to the building of beloved community, the Johnson's story is an essential -- and moving -- lesson in the courage it takes to transform tragedy and despair into resilience and hope, all in the pursuit of justice." -- --Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow In this brilliant investigative deep dive, historian Shetterly (The Americano) revisits the 1979 slaying of five radical Black activists by the KKK during an anti-Klan protest in Greensboro, N.C. The Klansmen who fired on the protest were acquitted--they alleged self-defense, though surviving activists maintained their group had not been armed, a fact that Shetterly carefully pieces together evidence to confirm.Propulsive and precise, this brings into startling focus the freewheeling world of law enforcement's Cold War-era anticommunist crusade. -- Publishers Weekly (starred review) Journalist Shetterly (The Americano: Fighting With Castro for Cuba's Freedom) offers an exhaustive and authoritative rendering of the murderous attack by Klansmen and neo-Nazis that killed five participants at an anti-Klan rally on Nov.


3, 1979,,, A must for anyone interested in the history of race and social structure in the United States. -- Kirkus Reviews "Aran Shetterly's incredible book offers a harrowing reminder of how our justice system too often turns a blind eye to the perpetrators of racial violence while denying their victims blind justice." -- Michelle Coles, former USDOJ civil rights attorney, Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commissioner, and author of Black Was the Ink "William Morgan, an American who made his way to the front line of Castro's revolution in Cuba, gets thorough and entertaining treatment in this biography. Largely unknown in the U.S., his story is filled with the suspense of a blockbuster war movie, offering new and insightful perspective into the political climate of 1950s Cuba . [turns] the intriguing story of one man into a thoughtful examination of 20th-century Cuban history." -- Publishers Weekly (starred review) on The Americano "The Americano's strength lies in explaining how the three anti-Batista forces constantly jockeyed for supremacy and influence.


Shetterly nicely weaves FBI, CIA and State Department files on Morgan into his narrative." -- Washington Post Book World on The Americano "Reads like a great epic novel" -- Carlos Eire, winner of the 2003 National Book Award for nonfiction, Waiting for Snow in Havana, on The Americano "A compelling history of one of the most intriguing characters and mysteries of the Cuban Revolution." -- Ann Louise Bardach, author of Cuba Confidential and coeditor of Fidel Castro's Prison Letters, on The Americano.


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Browse Subject Headings