From Booklist
*Starred Review* Published to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the landmark
Brown decision, this update and expansion of the widely acclaimed original work, published in 1976, goes beyond portrayals of the major players involved in the decision--the NAACP legal team, including Thurgood Marshall and Charles Houston; the defender of states' rights, John Davis; and Chief Justice Earl Warren, who brokered a unanimous decision shortly after joining the Court; and the complainants, who undertook personal risk to challenge the doctrine of separate but equal. In this volume, Kluger also analyzes the nation's progress on race issues in the intervening 28 years since the book was first published. In a new chapter, he looks at the politics and policies of the Nixon and Reagan eras--courting the South through retrenchment on racial integration and frontal attacks on busing--up to the current national obsession with colorblindness that has fostered a hypersegregation that mirrors conditions before the
Brown decision. This is a powerful resource for readers interested in reviewing the particulars of
Brown and the changes that have occurred since that landmark ruling.
Vernon FordCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
"An extraordinary research effort, and a major contribution to our understanding of the Supreme Court. ...Kluger has written three distinct books within one jacket. The first is an account of race relations in America. The second is a detailed study of the complex process -- the litigation strategy -- by which the five consolidated cases that we now know as Brown arose and worked their way up to the Supreme Court. The third is a meticulously researched account of the process within the Supreme Court by which the Brown decision was reached. -- Harvard Law Review
"A thought-provoking work that should become part of the standard literature on race relations."
-- The New York Times Book Review
"The definitive account, to date, of the struggle for black equality in America." -- The Nation --
Review
See all Editorial Reviews