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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Civil Rights Pioneer, September 14, 2009
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This review is from: To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells (Hardcover)
Ida B. Wells (1862 - 1931) was one of the first individuals to expose and oppose the lynching that became prevalent in the South and elsewhere in the years following Reconstruction. In the latter part of her life and for many years thereafter, Wells's life and accomplishments were in danger of being overlooked and marginalized. With the publication of her autobiography, "Crusade for Justice" (1971) and of her other writings together with several biographies, Ida Wells has since the 1970s been receiving overdue recognition. Mia Bay's recent biography, "To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells" (2009) offers a solid if dry account of Wells's life and accomplishments. Bay, associate professor of history at Rutgers University, is the associate director of Rutgers's Center for Race and Ethnicity and the author of "The White Image in the Black Mind: African-American Ideas About White People, 1830- 1925".

Wells's parents were slaves when she was born at Holly Springs, Mississippi. With the end of the Civil War, her parents became activists in support of Reconstruction, which became the dominant influence on her life. When Wells was 16, her mother and father and two siblings died in a Yellow Fever epidemic. Wells became a rural schoolteacher to support her remaining younger sisters. She attended college sporadically but was expelled from Rusk College in 1881 for reasons which remain obscure.

As a young woman, Wells moved to Memphis where she taught school and gradually found her way to writing and journalism using the name "Iola". Wells also filed a lawsuit against a railroad for forcing her to sit in a segregated, Jim Crow car. She ultimately lost her case on appeal. The defining moment of Wells's life occurred in 1892 when three male acquaintances in Memphis were lynched. Wells' investigated the lynchings and similar occurrences in the South and wrote about them in her paper. Wells rejected the claim of the apologists for lynching that the practice resulted from the rape of white women by black men. Wells wrote that lynching was instead a power move designed to keep African Americans in fear and servitude. But Southerners found particularly inflammatory Wells's findings that when sexual relationships between black men and white women occurred, these relationships tended to be clandestine, but consensual. She was forced to leave Memphis and lost all her property.

Moving to New York City, Wells became both famous and notorious. She worked with Frederick Douglass in protesting the exclusion of African Americans from participation or recognition in the 1893 Chicago Worlds Fair. She prepared a pamphlet for distribution during the Fair documenting the evils of lynching. She also made two trips to England where she was instrumental in organizing an anti-lynching society among the successors of the British abolitionist movement.

Following the Worlds Fair, Wells remained in Chicago and married a successful attorney, Ferdinand Barnett, with whom she had four children. She remained politically active for the rest of her life, but her fame was eclipsed by Booker T. Washington and then by W.E.B. DuBois. Wells helped found the NAACP, but her abrasive, confrontational and independent personality, together with her gender, denied her a leadership role in this or other national civil rights organizations. But she continued her crusade against lynching and was an activist in protecting the rights of the many African Americans pouring into Chicago as part of the Great Migration.

Bay offers a thorough and a sympathetic portrayal of Wells which draws on the autobiography and on Wells's other writings. Bay is good in showing Wells's relationships to other African American and feminist leaders, including Douglass, Washington, DuBois, and Susan B. Anthony, who counseled Wells against her marriage. Bay also writes with insight about how Wells's activist approach to African American rights was at odds with Booker T. Washington's accomodationist approach and with the subsequent approach of the NAACP which sought to vindicate African American civil rights through litigation and through legislation. Bay emphasizes, as she should, the role of gender in denying Wells a position of leadership within the African American community. But Bay's own text makes clear how tough and difficult Wells could be, even with her allies. Wells's own irascibility and temper seem at least as responsible for her independent status as was her gender.

I learned a great deal about Wells from this book, but I sensed a fire in the woman which Bay does not entirely capture. The book is well-documented and footnoted but lacks a bibliography. On the whole, Bay's book is effective in telling the story of an inspiring American who deserves to be remembered and admired.

Robin Friedman
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5.0 out of 5 stars Review of TO TELL THE TRUTH FREELY: THE LIFE OF IDA B WELLS, by Mia Bay, November 2, 2011
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This review is from: To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells (Hardcover)
This is an astounding, well written book! I am about 4 chapters away from completion; however, I could not WAIT to give my opinion. I hate putting this book down!

As a playwright of historical (specifically black females in history) subjects, I am constantly seeking out great, detailed bios. (Many are often very dry and that's just par for the course with some history.) I own Wells' CRUSADER FOR JUSTICE and THE MEMPHIS DIARY, the first being Ida's bio and the second being a compilation of the diaries she kept while living in Memphis between 1885 and 1893. I'm blown away by how it's possible that this book completely leaves both of those books like dust on a deserted road when it comes to details. I own Paula Gidding's IDA: A SWORD AMONG LIONS. I waited for it in anticipation. It got great reviews. Well, this book tramples it into bits!

This book covers every aspect of Ida's world from her youth in Memphis, to what shaped her into the crusader she became. With Well's bio, she is still quite guarded and protective. I was a little frustrated, because there were details she left out of very valuable parts of her world. Wells was intricate in her description of her journeys to Europe to campaign against lynching; however, she seemed to refuse revealing how she met her husband, how they fell in love. She would comment in-depth regarding her writings and literature when it came to getting the word out on her crusade; however, she refused to give us details concerning outside reaction and commentary from the people around her. We learn that she was exiled from Memphis for her views and specifically the editorial she wrote concerning the lynching of her three friends, however, we aren't made privy to how she felt about leaving her home, which was of course devastating. This book provides those answers and fills in the gaps! Bay doesn't make up explanations. She pieces answers together from letters and surrounding circumstances that Ida was unwilling to reveal.

Reading this book is like shining a light between the lines of all the other books about Ida that tried very much to tell the story of this dynamic and incredible woman so blandly. Bay has a way of revealing each details making this book a page turner.

I had respect for Ida as a woman who attempted to shape a better world, but there were parts of me left cold by her evasive protectiveness. This book shattered that cold. I feel as though I'm getting a chance to really get to not know, but understand her passion. My basic respect has been warmed by true adoration.... because of this book....

If you can't tell, I highly recommend this book! If you love history and love learning the `little things', get this book. I guarantee you will want to send me flowers later for the recommendation!
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What an Outstanding Book! We Loved It!, March 6, 2009
This review is from: To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells (Hardcover)
"The name Ida B. Wells should be interchangeable with the word `courage'. She took her fight for equal rights all the way to the Supreme Court of Tennessee where she lost. She worked for the rights for women, no matter what their color and her life's story should be required reading for everyone."
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To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells
To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells by Mia Bay (Hardcover - February 17, 2009)
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