The Reviews Are In:
“Relentless and fascinating. It … will now haunt us all.”
—Janet Maslin, The New York Times
“A supremely brave and focused book."
—Atlanta Magazine
“A formidably researched, powerfully written, wrenchingly detailed narrative of the mistreatment of millions of blacks in America, mistreatment that kept African-Americans in shackles of the body and mind long after slavery had officially ended.”
—Publishers Weekly Starred Review
“A devastating picture of the ugly and outrageous practices that kept tens of thousands of Black Americans enslaved until the onset of World War II. Slavery By Another Name is a passionate, highly impressive and hugely important book."
—David J. Garrow, author of the Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, winner of the Pulitzer Prize
"This groundbreaking book illuminates black Americans' lingering suspicions of the criminal justice system. The false imprisonment of black men has its history in an ignominious economic system that depended on coerced labor and didn't flinch from savagery toward fellow human beings. Blackmon's exhaustive reportage should put an end to the oft-repeated slander that black Americans tend toward lawlessness."
—Cynthia Tucker, editorial page editor of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and 2007 winner of the Pulitzer Prize
Read more about Douglas A. Blackmon, excerpts and images from the book, comments from readers and even more reviews from around the country.
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