
Stories of Scottsboro
$36.29
- Paperback
496 pages
- Release Date
28 March 1995
Summary
From the Pulitzer Prize-nominated author of But Where Is the Lamb? comes a grippingly narrated work of history and “edge-of-the-seat reportage” (Chicago Tribune) that tells the story of a case that marked a watershed in American racial justice.
To white Southerners, it was “a heinous and unspeakable crime” that flouted a taboo as old as slavery. To the Communist Party, which mounted the defense, the Scottsboro case was an ideal opportunity to unite issues of race and class. To jury af…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780679761594 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0679761594 |
| Author: | James Goodman |
| Publisher: | Random House USA Inc |
| Imprint: | Vintage Books |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 496 |
| Release Date: | 28 March 1995 |
| Weight: | 477g |
| Dimensions: | 204mm x 132mm x 33mm |
| Series: | Vintage |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
“A rich and compelling narrative, as taut and suspenseful as good fiction. In places, Stories of Scottsboro is almost heartbreaking, not least because Goodman shows what people felt as well as what they thought.” —The Washington Post Book World
“Extraordinary…. To do justice to the Scottsboro story a book would have to combine edge-of-the-seat reportage and epic narrative sweep. And it is just such a book that James Goodman has given us, a beautifully realized history…written with complete authority, tight emotional control, and brilliant use of archival material.” —Chicago Tribune
“This gripping book does much more than tell the story of Scottsboro with new information and insight. It invents a new way of writing history. Like a kaleidoscope, the author rotates the stories told by various participants in that cause of the 1930s, causing new patterns to emerge until they take a form we can call truth.” —James M. McPherson
About The Author
James Goodman
James Goodman is the Pulitzer Prize-nominated author of But Where Is the Lamb? Imagining the Story of Abraham and Isaac, Blackout, and Stories of Scottsboro. He has received fellowships and awards from NYU, Princeton, Rutgers, and the Guggenheim Foundation. He is the US editor of the journal Rethinking History and is a professor at Rutgers University, where he teaches history and creative writing. He lives in New York.
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