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Ladataan... Race Against Time: A Reporter Reopens the Unsolved Murder Cases of the Civil Rights EraTekijä: Jerry Mitchell
![]() Top Five Books of 2021 (221) Crime (18) Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. A book that is fifty years in the making. It chronicles four different crimes in Mississippi where for years the perpetrators got away Scot free including the assassination of Medgar Evers and the church bombings that killed four young Black girls who were in their Sunday school class. The thing that binds these events together is the Ku Klux KLan. The author is an intrepid reporter who with others keeps these killings in the news always hoping that those who were responsible would be held accountable. It took over forty years but ultimately some were. A testament to dogged persistence. If you needed another reason to get mad over the American justice system and violence against Black people, this book will do it for you. It’s got everything—murdered civil rights activists, families begging for justice, Klansmen in positions of power, apathetic district attorneys, government conspiracies, leaked documents, people bragging about getting away with murder…. Mitchell’s shock and outrage is palpable, and it’s really no wonder that he spent decades chasing leads and seeing these cases closed. This really reads more like a legal thriller than true crime. It’s got that same tension, the same sorts of twists and characters, the same burning pace that grabs hold and doesn’t let go. Mitchell absolutely knows how to tell a story, whether it’s walking you through a crime and the original investigation, relaying his own research and poking at lawyers, sheriffs, and the general public, playing out the trials, or talking about his life and the lives of the victims’ families. You can’t help but feel for the people who suffered under the KKK’s reign of terror, or to hate the racists and their abetters as much as Mitchell does. (Not that the racists don’t make it easy to hate them. Good Lord.) And maybe this is because I’m Canadian or maybe it’s because I’m white, but I learned a lot about the civil rights era from this too, because Mitchell makes sure to give context for why these activists were killed, what their tactics were, the networks and reverberations of the killings, and how the police and FBI dealt with everything. And we’re not talking small, unknown cases here. We’re talking about people even I’d heard of, though I’m ashamed to say I didn’t know the details of their lives or deaths. Heck, Mitchell’s fight for justice started when he watched a movie reenactment. So yes! History! Learning things! Good! Of course, because this is Mitchell’s story and at some level a memoir, there is a sense of Mitchell being the hero of the story. After all, he was the one who found key information, the one who got confessions, the one who bothered DAs until they gave a darn—but on the one hand, he doesn’t seem to be exaggerating his part, and on the other, he’s making sure to give credit to the others fighting to get these victims justice, especially the families. He’s also pretty good about pointing out failures, lost opportunities, and grey areas where things aren’t necessarily Good or Bad, they just Are. So I’m inclined to give him a pass. In short: an excellent, frightening, illuminating, topical read. I definitely recommend it. To bear in mind: The murderers and their friends are literally KKK-level white supremacists and 110% okay with spouting vileness on the record. Mitchell is equally okay laying that all out for everyone to see. So besides the hate crimes and a largely apathetic judicial system, you will get racial slurs, racist conspiracy theories, death threats, and the like. 8.5/10 This is a book about the resolution of four significant civil rights era cold-case murders: (1) the 1963 murder of Mississippi's NAACP field secretary, Medgar Edgars, (2) the 1963 bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, (3) the 1964 Freedom Summer "Mississippi Burning" murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, and (4) the 1966 murder of the president of the Forrest County Mississippi NAACP chapter, Vernon Dahmer Sr. The author, a reporter for the Jackson, Mississippi, The Clarion-Ledger newspaper, was intimately involved in following leads and tracking progress by law enforcement on all four cases, resulting in new convictions in all four cases: (1) Byron De La Beckwith for the assassination of Medgar Evers, (2) Klu Klux Klan Imperial Wizard, Sam Bowers, for ordering the fatal firebombing of Vernon Dahmer, (3) Bobby Cherry for the bombing of the Birmingham church that killed four girls and, (4) Edgar Ray Killen, for directly orchestrating the "Mississippi Burning" killings, in that chronology. Early on, in reading this book, I was not learning much, as I have read a great deal on civil rights era cases, and had seen the documentary, The Spies of Mississippi, in which the author plays a prominent role in the presentation. While being a long-time newspaper reporter, the author's narrative is relatively clean and simple, but eventually, as a reader, you feel the narrative shift more to that of a film noir, Sam Spade type, voice over. I mean this guy was really, truly, in the middle of all four of these cases. It's a little amazing he is still alive to report on all of it, because he was clearly subject to potentially great harm from those being investigated and their close associates. If potential readers know little or nothing about any or all of these four cases, they will be drawn deeply into them. I was, and I already knew quite a lot about all of them. This nonfiction book is the story of trying to get justice for slain civil rights workers, long after the crimes were committed. For me, the first quarter or so of the book seemed a bit on the dry side, but I got more interested when it got to the murder of Medgar Evers. Justice has been served, to an extent, but there was far too little, and far too late. Corrupt government, and officials who were part of the terrorists (which is what these thugs are) compounded the problems. This was in interesting story, mostly heartbreaking but also uplifting when you look at the courage of these people trying to make the system right. However, I think the story could have been told a little more concisely. ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
Distinctions
"An award-winning investigative reporter shares the real-life detective story of how Klansmen came to justice in notorious unsolved civil rights cold cases--decades after they had gotten away with murder"-- Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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Mitchell’s writing had me on the edge of my seat. I had a hard time putting the book down once I started. It’s difficult reading because of the truly evil people Mitchell interviewed as part of his reporting. It must have been infinitely more difficult for Mitchell to live. I only had to read about these people. Mitchell had to meet with them, talk with them on the phone, and worry about which one of them might show up at his home on a dark night. The evil is balanced with the heroic and the brave in the form of the widows, parents, children, siblings, and friends of the victims, and the bittersweet satisfaction of justice after so many decades of waiting.
The book includes a thorough index, end notes, and a good-sized bibliography for further reading. The acknowledgments include a list of successful Civil Rights prosecutions from 1977–2010 including the case name, the victims, the outcome, the sentence, and the prosecution team. Mitchell helpfully provides the reader with the correct pronunciation for the names of all of the main figures. The only thing lacking is a list of the important figures and their roles. I would have referred to such a list frequently if one had been provided.
This book belongs in all Civil Rights collections. Highly recommended. (