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Parting the Waters : America in the King Years 1954-63 Paperback – Illustrated, November 15, 1989
- Pulitzer PrizeWinner, 1989
- National Book Critics Circle AwardWinner, 1988
- Los Angeles Times Book PrizeWinner, 1989
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Hailed as the most masterful story ever told of the American Civil Rights Movement, Parting the Waters is destined to endure for generations.
Moving from the fiery political baptism of Martin Luther King, Jr., to the corridors of Camelot where the Kennedy brothers weighed demands for justice against the deceptions of J. Edgar Hoover, here is a vivid tapestry of America, torn and finally transformed by a revolutionary struggle unequaled since the Civil War.
Taylor Branch provides an unsurpassed portrait of King's rise to greatness and illuminates the stunning courage and private conflict, the deals, maneuvers, betrayals, and rivalries that determined history behind closed doors, at boycotts and sit-ins, on bloody freedom rides, and through siege and murder.
Epic in scope and impact, Branch's chronicle definitively captures one of the nation's most crucial passages.
- Print length1088 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster
- Publication dateNovember 15, 1989
- Dimensions6.13 x 1.9 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-100671687425
- ISBN-13978-0671687427
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Timeline of a Trilogy
Taylor Branch's America in the King Years series is both a biography of Martin Luther King and a history of his age. No timeline can do justice to its wide cast of characters and its intricate web of incident, but here are some of the highlights, which might be useful as a scorecard to the trilogy's nearly 3,000 pages.
King The King Years Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63 May: At age 25, King gives his first sermon as pastor-designate of Montgomery's Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. 1954 May: French surrender to Viet Minh at Dien Bien Phu. Unanimous Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board outlaws segregated public education. December: Rosa Parks is arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a public bus, leading to the Montgomery bus boycott, which King is drafted to lead. 1955 October: King spends his first night in jail, following his participation in an Atlanta sit-in. 1960 February: Four students attempting to integrate a Greensboro, North Carolina, lunch counter spark a national sit-in movement.
April: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee is founded.
November: Election of President John F. Kennedy May: The Freedom Rides begin, drawing violent responses as they challenge segregation throughout the South. King supports the riders during an overnight siege in Montgomery. 1961 July: SNCC worker Bob Moses arrives for his first summer of voter registration in rural Mississippi.
August: East German soldiers seal off West Berlin behind the Berlin Wall. March: J. Edgar Hoover authorizes the bugging of Stanley Levinson, King's closest white advisor. 1962 September: James Meredith integrates the University of Mississippi under massive federal protection. April: King, imprisoned for demonstrating in Birmingham, writes the "Letter from Birmingham Jail."
May: Images of police violence against marching children in Birmingham rivet the country.
August: King delivers his "I Have a Dream" speech before hundreds of thousands at the March on Washington.
September: The Ku Klux Klan bombing of Birmingham's 16th Street Baptist Church kills four young girls. 1963 June: Mississippi NAACP leader Medgar Evers assassinated.
November: President Kennedy assassinated. Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-65 November: Lyndon Johnson, in his first speech before Congress as president, promises to push through Kennedy's proposed civil rights bill. March: King meets Malcolm X for the only time during Senate filibuster of civil rights legislation.
June: King joins St. Augustine, Florida, movement after months of protests and Klan violence.
October: King awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and campaigns for Johnson's reelection.
November: Hoover calls King "the most notorious liar in the country" and the FBI sends King an anonymous "suicide package" containing scandalous surveillance tapes. 1964 January: Johnson announces his "War on Poverty."
March: Malcolm X leaves the Nation of Islam following conflict with its leader, Elijah Muhammad.
June: Hundreds of volunteers arrive in the South for SNCC's Freedom Summer, three of whom are soon murdered in Philadelphia, Mississippi.
July: Johnson signs Civil Rights Act outlawing discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
August: Congress passes Gulf of Tonkin resolution authorizing military force in Vietnam. Democratic National Convention rebuffs the request by the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to be seated in favor of all-white state delegation.
November: Johnson wins a landslide reelection. January: King's first visit to Selma, Alabama, where mass meetings and demonstrations will build through the winter. 1965 February: Malcolm X speaks in Selma in support of movement, three weeks before his assassination in New York by Nation of Islam members.
Review
Robert C. Maynard The Washington Post Book World In remarkable, meticulous detail, Branch provides us with the most complex and unsentimental version of King and his times yet produced.
Richard John Neuhaus The Wall Street Journal A compelling story, masterfully told.
Jim Miller Newsweek A masterpiece ... remarkably revealing.... The past, miraculously, seems to spring back to life.
Garry Wills The New York Review of Books Already, in this chronicle, there is the material of Iliad after Iliad...There is no time in our history of which we can be more proud.
Robert Wilson USA Today Superb history.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Parting the Waters
America in the King Years 1963-65By Taylor BranchSimon & Schuster
Copyright ©1989 Taylor BranchAll right reserved.
ISBN: 0671687425
From Chapter One
Nearly seven hundred Negro communicants, some wearing white robes, marched together in the exodus of 1867. They followed the white preacher out of the First Baptist Church and north through town to Columbus Street, then east up the muddy hill to Ripley Street. There on that empty site, the congregation declared itself the First Baptist Church (Colored), with appropriate prayers and ceremonies, and a former slave named Nathan Ashby became the first minister of an independent Negro Baptist church in Montgomery, Alabama.
Most local whites considered the separation a bargain, given the general state of turmoil and numb destitution after the war. Governor Robert M. Patton and the new legislature, in a wild gamble based on Andrew Johnson's friendliness toward prominent ex-Confederates, openly repudiated the Fourteenth Amendment's recognition of Negro citizenship rights, only to have a Union brigadier walk into the Montgomery capitol to declare that he was superseding the state government again until its officials saw fit to reconsider. White spirits fell; Negro spirits soared. The town's population had swelled to fourteen thousand, with Negroes outnumbering whites three to one. Refugees of both races were fleeing the crop failures and foreclosures in the countryside and streaming into Montgomery, where they often lived in clumps on the streets and entertained themselves by watching the outdoor sheriff's sales.
Under such conditions, and with the U.S. Congress threatening a new Fifteenth Amendment to establish the right of Negroes to vote and govern, most whites were of no mind to dispute the Negro right to religion. Many were only too happy to clear the throngs from the church basement, even if it meant that their previous items of property would be conducting their own church business at the corner of Columbus and Ripley?offering motions, debating, forming committees, voting, hiring and firing preachers, contributing pennies, bricks, and labor to make pews and windows rise into the first free Negro institution. The Negro church legal in some respects before the Negro family, became more solvent than the local undertaker.
Ten years later, a dissident faction of the First Baptist Church (Colored) marched away in a second exodus that would forever stamp the characters of the two churches. Both sides would do their best to pass off the schism as nothing more than the product of cramped quarters and growing pains, but trusted descendants would hear of the quarrels inevitable among a status-starved people. Undoubtedly some of the tensions were the legacy of slavery's division between the lowly field hands and the slightly more privileged house servants, the latter more often mulattoes. These tensions culminated when "higher elements" among the membership mounted a campaign to remodel the church to face the drier Ripley Street instead of the sloping Columbus, where they were obliged to muddy their shoes on Sundays after a rain. Their proposed renovation, while expensive, would afford cleaner and more dignified access.
Most members and some deacons considered this an unseemly and even un-Christian preoccupation with personal finery, but a sizable minority felt strongly enough to split off and form the Second Baptist Church (Colored). Although the secessionists shared the poverty of the times and of their race?and held their organizational meeting in the old Harwell Mason slave pen?the world of their immediate vision was one of relative privilege. At the first baptismal services, conducted by a proper British minister, guests included three equally proper white Yankee schoolmistresses from the missionary legions who were still streaming south to educate and Christianize the freedmen. In January 1879, the new church paid $250 for a lot and a building that stood proudly in the center of town on Dexter Avenue, little more than a stone's throw from the grand entrance of the Alabama state capitol. The all-Negro congregation renamed itself Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. Its first minister, a former slave named Charles Octavius Boothe, wrote that the members were "people of money and refinement" and boasted that one of the members, a barber named Billingslea, owned property worth $300,000. This claim, though widely doubted, entered the official church history.
From the beginning, Dexter Avenue operated as a "deacons' church," meaning that the lay officers took advantage of the full sovereignty claimed by each Baptist congregation. They were free to hire any preacher they wanted?trained or untrained, fit or unfit?without regard to bishops or other church hierarchy. The Baptists had no such hierarchy at all, nor any educational requirements for the pulpit, and this fact had contributed mightily to the spread of the denomination among unlettered whites and Negroes alike. Anyone with lungs and a claim of faith could become a preacher. And as the ministry was the only white-collar trade open to Negroes during slavery?when it was a crime in all the Southern states to teach Negroes to read or allow them to engage in any business requiring the slightest literacy?preachers and would-be preachers competed fiercely for recognition. Religious oratory became the only safe marketable skill, and a reputation for oratory substituted for diplomas and all other credentials. For most of the next century, a man with a burning desire to be a saint might well find himself competing with another preacher intent only on making a fortune, as all roads converged at the Negro church. It served not only as a place of worship but also as a bulletin board to a people who owned no organs of communication, a credit union to those without banks, and even a kind of people's court. These and a hundred extra functions further enhanced the importance of the minister, creating opportunities and pressures that forged what amounted to a new creature and caused the learned skeptic W.E.B. Du Bois to declare at the turn of the twentieth century that "the preacher is the most unique personality developed by the Negro on American soil."
Not surprisingly, these powerful characters sorely tested the ability of congregations to exercise the authority guaranteed them in Baptist doctrine. As a rule, the preachers had no use for church democracy. They considered themselves called by God to the role of Moses, a combination of ruler and prophet, and they believed that the congregation behaved best when its members, like the children of Israel, obeyed as children. The board of deacons at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church was one of the few to defend itself effectively against preachers who regularly tried to subdue the membership. Indeed, the board's very identity seemed rooted in the conviction that the church's quality lay as much in the membership as in the pastor. And because those same deacons also made it a tradition to choose the best trained, most ambitious ministers, titanic struggles after the fashion of those between European monarchs and nobles became almost a routine of church life at Dexter. Nearly a dozen preachers came and went in the first decade.
By contrast, the First Baptist Church (Colored) remained a "preacher's church," with only three pastors during its first fifty-seven years of existence. The exalted preachers tended to reign in a manner that provoked another mass exodus in 1910, not long after the church burned to the ground. The minister at that time, Andrew Stokes, was a great orator and organizer who had baptized an astonishing total of 1,100 new members during his first year in the pulpit. Stokes made First Baptist the largest Negro church in the United States until the great migration of 1917 created larger congregations in Chicago. He was also a money-maker. If white realtors had trouble selling a house, they often advanced Stokes the down payment, letting him keep his "refund" when white buyers mobilized to keep him out of their neighborhood. Stokes would joke with his deacons about the justice of making the whites pay for their prejudice, and he donated a portion of the proceeds to the church. This was fine, but a controversy erupted when Stokes proposed to rebuild the burned church a few hundred feet to the northeast on a corner lot that he owned and to take title to the parsonage in exchange for the property. Many irreparable wounds were inflicted in the debate that followed. Stokes went so far as to promise to make the new church entrance face Ripley Street, as the wealthier members had demanded more than thirty years earlier, but the unmollified elite among the deacons led a fresh secession down to Dexter Avenue Baptist.
It was said that Dexter actually discouraged new members, fearing that additions above the peak of seven hundred would reduce the quality of the whole, and several Dexter deacons predicted in public that Stokes would never be able to rebuild First Baptist without their money and influence. Undaunted, Stokes continued preaching to the impoverished masses who stayed with him, meeting outdoors when he could not borrow a church, and he laid down his law: those who were too poor to meet the demands of the building fund must bring one brick each day to the new site, whether that brick was bought, stolen, or unearthed from Civil War ruins. At the dedication ceremony five years later, Stokes led the great cry of thanks that went up for what became known as the "Bricka-Day Church."
Copyright © 1988 by Taylor Branch
Continues...
Excerpted from Parting the Watersby Taylor Branch Copyright ©1989 by Taylor Branch. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster
- Publication date : November 15, 1989
- Edition : Reprint
- Language : English
- Print length : 1088 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0671687425
- ISBN-13 : 978-0671687427
- Item Weight : 3.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.13 x 1.9 x 9.25 inches
- Book 1 of 3 : America in the King Years
- Best Sellers Rank: #220,518 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Taylor Branch is the bestselling author of Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63 (which won the Pulitzer Prize), Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-65, and At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years, 1965-1968. The author of two other nonfiction books and a novel, Branch is a former staff member of The Washington Monthly, Harper's, and Esquire. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.
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Customers find this book to be a masterpiece of intelligent writing that tells history as a narrative, with a stunning amount of research and why and how explained in great detail. Moreover, they appreciate its compelling pacing and powerful energy, with one customer noting it provides a great behind-the-scenes look. However, the book's length receives mixed reactions, with several customers finding it very long.
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Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a masterpiece that deserves to be read slowly.
"Great book easy to understand a direct raw open look into King life. Best King book I ever read! Great read" Read more
"...Great read" Read more
"Amazing and inspiring stories of courage. Though the book is thick, the author's lucid and at times rhapsodic writing makes it a fairly quick read...." Read more
"This is a highly good read, Taylor Branch has a way of letting you live in the present, while drawing you in the past...." Read more
Customers appreciate the historical narrative of the book, describing it as essential American history and a compelling story of human struggles.
"Amazing and inspiring stories of courage. Though the book is thick, the author's lucid and at times rhapsodic writing makes it a fairly quick read...." Read more
"...a projected series of three volumes - begins a comprehensive history of the civil rights movement, focusing on the role played by Martin Luther King...." Read more
"...'s books, or those of Dr. Bond, but with the twist of exciting narrative writing with NARRATIVE carrying the argument,..." Read more
"...era chronicle, admirably fulfills a writer's twin duties of telling a compelling story while managing a vast amount of historical material...." Read more
Customers praise the book's depth, noting its extensive research and detailed examination of events, with one customer highlighting its thorough exploration of Martin Luther King Jr.'s theological and social philosophies.
"...Inspiring and detailed." Read more
"Inspiring, Enlightening, Historically Exciting..." Read more
"...has a lot to say about how King, through personal effort, became a great leader...." Read more
"...Branch managed to combine the intensity of research or a well writing and researched PhD, with access to many key people, because of his location of..." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, describing it as highly readable and a masterpiece of intelligent writing, with one customer noting how the author makes historical events come alive.
"...Also, it is so well written, it is a page turner. I wish it would never end. It is brilliant!!! If I could give it ten stars, I would." Read more
"...King was, of course, a great orator, and Branch is pretty adept at analyzing his methods...." Read more
"...Branch managed to combine the intensity of research or a well writing and researched PhD, with access to many key people, because of his location of..." Read more
"...This is an intelligent and scholarly work, though the writing style is quite accessible...." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book compelling, with one describing it as addictive and another noting its educational value.
"...reading this book I could not put it down; it is a powerful, captivating, detailed, gripping non-fiction account of the civil rights years in the 60s..." Read more
"...It is compelling and shocking at points. Lots of mundane day to day data about many unsung heroes...." Read more
"This book is provocative, powerful, informative and addictive. I greatly enjoyed this work and would recommend it to all! Thank you to the author!" Read more
"...The book is at once inspiring and enervating and left me with the overall impression that politics is as inescapable as it is stupid and uninspiring." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's energy level, describing it as powerful.
"This book is provocative, powerful, informative and addictive. I greatly enjoyed this work and would recommend it to all! Thank you to the author!" Read more
"...He has remarkable energy and writing talent, and a wonderful ability to shift gears, weave threads together." Read more
"Once I started reading this book I could not put it down; it is a powerful, captivating, detailed, gripping non-fiction account of the civil rights..." Read more
"In depth and powerful...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's look, with one mentioning it provides a great behind-the-scenes perspective and another noting it offers a big picture view.
"...You are able to remember the sounds, sights, and energies of the past...." Read more
"...'s intelligence, and has an amazing ability to mix detail and the big picture...." Read more
"Great behind the scenes look at the the civil rights movement during the years in question...." Read more
"Great book easy to understand a direct raw open look into King life. Best King book I ever read! Great read" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the length of the book.
"...Thus, this book is way too long...." Read more
"Very long winded and in depth. Does a wonderful job up till 63 and just ends...." Read more
"Long, but really worth the read. I learned a lot." Read more
"...I highly recommend this very, very, very long, but impressive book to anyone who wonders about history...." Read more
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King: Spiritual leader
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2002This book - the first in a projected series of three volumes - begins a comprehensive history of the civil rights movement, focusing on the role played by Martin Luther King. It is not a biography of King per se but Taylor Branch has a lot to say about how King, through personal effort, became a great leader. King was, of course, a great orator, and Branch is pretty adept at analyzing his methods. But almost anyone who has heard King or read him knows that he was channeling something greater than himself.
What King wanted for himself was a life of scholarship. Yet, as Jesus said on the Mount of Olives, "not my will, but yours be done." In a brilliant anecdote, Branch relates how King was elected, almost accidentally, to head the Montgomery Bus Boycott. At a mass meeting that evening, King gave an inspired speech. At the end of the speech, the audience sat, stunned. People reached out to touch him as he left the building. "[King] would work on his timing, but his oratory had just made him forever a public person. . . . He was twenty-six, and had not quite twelve years and four months to live." The obstacles in Montgomery in 1955 were many, and only a few weeks passed before King sat in despair, his face buried in his hands. He prayed, saying "I've come to the point where I can't face it alone." As he spoke these words, he experienced a transcendent religious experience that gave him the strength to continue his struggle. No man is perfect, but King knew his duty, and did it.
Beyond its insights into King's character, this book offers readers a survey of our country at a critical juncture. When the civil rights movement began, the balance of interests in the United States had left the South in the grip of the great evil of segregation. King himself shifted the balance. At the same time, thousands of ordinary Americans, devoted to nonviolent struggle, suffered tremendous privation, loss of livelihood, beatings, and sometimes death, making it impossible for the federal government to ignore the plight of Southern blacks.
Finally, through Branch's history, we meet a large number of what could almost be called interesting minor figures except that they were not minor at all. One of these is Vernon Johns, a brilliant farmer-preacher who preached the social gospel. In a memorable scene, Johns is asked to address a group of white and black preachers who are meeting to discuss the role of the church during a time of racial tension. He says, "The thing that disappoints me about the Southern white church is that it spends all of its time dealing with Jesus after the cross, instead of dealing with Jesus before the cross. . . . If that were the heart of Christianity, all God had to do was drop him down on Friday, let them kill him, and then yank him up again on Easter Sunday. That's all you hear. You don't hear so much about his three years of teaching that man's religion is revealed in the love of his fellow man. He who says he loves God and hates his fellow man is a liar, and the truth is not in him. That is what offended the leaders of Jesus's own established religion as well as the colonial authorities from Rome. That's why they put him up there. . . . I want to deal with Jesus before the cross. I don't give a damn what happened to him after the cross." At this point, no one's too happy that they invited Johns to speak. Lest we think that Johns was just an eccentric, though, Branch also refers us to Johns' "Transfigured Moments," which can be found on the web and shows Johns to be a serious man of considerable understanding and imagination.
In addition to its merit as history, Parting the Waters is a great read, and deserves to be read slowly. If you can do this, the time you spend with this 900-plus-page book will be extremely rewarding.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2015I have known Taylor Branch since 1968, when I was a writer for The Great Speckled Bird, already the South's Standard Underground or Alternative newspaper, now digitized via the Georgia State University labor and cultural archives, one of the leading such sites of archival innovation in the region, perhaps the U.S. At the time I'm not sure what Taylor was doing, for work, but I recall he was living in Atlanta, perhaps working a day job, but organizing for McCarthy, in opposing Lyndon Johnson's renomination, as part of the broad based opposition to the Vietnam/Indochina war. As a graduate of one of the finer Presbyterian prep schools in the city, he continued on his career up east, after the McCarthy/Julian Bond led challenge delegation upset the labor activists supporting Humphrey, in Chicagoas well as the old south folk appointed by then Gov. Lester Maddox, in one of the great and least remember successes of the African-American pioneered Challenge strategy which changed the Democratic Party, andra America, leading to the nominations and victories of progressives, like Bill Clinton, and ultimately, Barack Obama. Between the time of the successful seating of the Georgia Challenge Delegation in Chicago, in 1968, and 1971, black Americans had already decided on a strategy of nominating and ultimately electing a Black President, the title of a front page article for THE NATION, which I wrote in 1971, while still writing and 'reporting' for THE BIRD, and as an associate at the new INSTITUTE FOR SOUTHERN STUDIES, of which Julian Bond was President, chosen for his opposition to the war, the Supreme Court case which bears his name, his own literary acumen, and his father's scholarly writing as best known, in a book published around that time, '68, Negro Education in Alabama, A study in cotton and steel. This profound work out of the 30s continued to inspire the work of the Institute as it moved to North Carolina, and I would be surprised if its publication SOUTHERN EXPOSURE did not include a favorable review of this book, now a Classic, in the same league as C.Vann Woodward's books, or those of Dr. Bond, but with the twist of exciting narrative writing with NARRATIVE carrying the argument, (see preceding reviews, including some of 60's Republicans, (self described) instead of the more typical 'academic argumentative style' which is characteristic of the post PhD, tenure seeking, too often eyelid closing SERIOUS RESEARCH. Branch managed to combine the intensity of research or a well writing and researched PhD, with access to many key people, because of his location of 'home town Atlanta,' as well as a dynamic writing style and an appropriate Perspective which puts the life of Dr. King, and the many, many other players in the non-violent MOVEMENT which Branch so tellingly describes, quotes, etc at the center of the world non-violent MOVEMENT, the most philosophically interesting movement, to quote a friend, Dr. Hortense Spillers of Vanderbilt, in the post Hiroshima world. And this book, so far, (FBI records have not been completely released and organized on many of the 'lesser' groups of the era, such as CORE, SNCC, and even SCLC, or even NAACP, all key groups resisting in different ways the varying forms of totalitarianism in such familiar venues as Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina, all of which continue to contribute their neo-fascists innovations to the national dialogue.
Top reviews from other countries
- IanReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 20, 2008
5.0 out of 5 stars An epic and intimate portrait: spell-binding!
This is one of the most powerful and moving books I've ever read, and I wanted to give it six stars. How here to do it justice?
First, it's a cracking read. (Other history books can be heavy, you keep checking to see how many pages to the end, or left in the chapter). "Parting the Waters" is a real page-turner. It is long -- it kept me going through a long haul flight, lots of airport waiting and a couple of long bus/train rides -- but it made the time pass effortlessly.
It's a great story, structured like a novel: strong central character, you meet him in experienced youth; the hero encounters challenges, and overcomes them and embarks on a long and dangerous journey with many battles and dangers, the hero takes on these battles and grows stronger. This classic plot structure with a real heroic quality makes it a gripping read.
"Parting the Waters" chronicles the grand canvass of the civil rights movement: the major battles (Montgomery bus boycott, the freedom rides, the voter registration drivers, the Birmingham campaign...), the politcal backdrop (Kennedy's election, Kennedy's Presidency, the dilemmas over the Civil Rights bill), all the characters, internal conflicts and under-currents among civil rights organisations and campaigners. But as well it zooms in with tender and intimate portraits on the people at the centre or caught up in the turmoil: how did it affect one of the protestors... or the story of a mother... or of one of the tragic victims.
It's so important: the end of apartheid in the world's biggest democracy. Tenant farmers who tried to register to vote were evicted from their farms. Men and women riding a bus were stoned and fire-bombed. Police officers beat up citizens for fun. Those who tried to testify were shot in the head. And, terribly, so much more.
Parting the Waters makes you live the emotion. I felt dumbfounded at what southern USA was like in the fifties and sixties, inspired by the civil rights campaigners, numbed by the viciousness and brutal violence they faced, in tears at what they had to go through, angry, so angry they had go through it; on the edge of my seat, alert and rivetted, to see what happened next, bewildered by and in despair of the whites' attitudes, in tears again at the protestors' courage, such inspiring and daunting courage.
And Martin Luther King: we see him with all his weaknesses and flaws, but what a giant of a man! What a giant of human history!
This book is being read in 1000 years time and I run out of superlatives.
- M ClarkReviewed in Germany on February 28, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Read this to learn how heroic people were in the civil rights movement
Taylor Branch has written a three-volume history of the civil rights movement. Being three volumes, the book is comprehensive enough to include the names of the hymns sung in church services. These details help readers really get involved in the dramatic events of the time. Reading about Selma and other events, you actually share the fear of the participants and appreciate what heroes these people really were.
- Kindle CustomerReviewed in Canada on February 1, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb
Yes, this book is l-o-n-g; but it is also deeply researched, passionately argued, and written with the flair and narrative drive of a first-rate novel. Or to put the matter less delicately: the book is nothing short of a masterpiece.
Don't hesitate. Buy it.
- Amazon72Reviewed in India on December 7, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb
Superb
- BinoyReviewed in India on October 6, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Review
Good book...