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As his subtitle suggests, former Washington Post reporter Williams (author of the best-selling Eyes on the Prize), is interested foremost in Thurgood Marshall's role as the leader "of a burgeoning social revolution" during the early years of the civil rights movement. What's surprising is how deeply opposed the brilliant lawyer was to the other two members of what Williams dubs "the black triumvirate." Marshall disdained Martin Luther King Jr.'s non-violent protests as ineffective and resented the media attention King garnered; he saw Malcolm X as a destructive thug. Reviewing Marshall's stunning impact on the nation's legal system first as the NAACP's chief counsel, later as President Lyndon Johnson's solicitor general, and finally as the first black Supreme Court justice Williams dramatically and persuasively makes the case that Marshall, the man who ended legal segregation with his landmark Brown v. Board of Education victory, is by far the most important of the three. Though Marshall's string of legal victories brought him fame as a crusader and savior of his race during the 1950s, he was rejected by militant black-power advocates in the late '60s, when his gradualism and respect for law and order were out of step with the times.
Williams does a good job of bringing alive the private Marshall, a necessary task, since the justice's seclusion during the last 30 years of his life removed him from the public eye. A confirmed drinker and womanizer, Marshall was a charismatic man whose gift of gab was equally useful for negotiating political tightropes, neutralizing critics like J. Edgar Hoover, or putting bigoted southern sheriffs at ease. Williams is uncritical of Marshall's personal flaws, but his reconstruction of Marshall makes for a lively and immensely valuable portrait of a first-rate legal mind and true American hero.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | xi |
| INTRODUCTION | xv |
| FAMILY TREE | xix |
| 1. Right Time, Right Man? | 3 |
| 2. A Fighting Family | 15 |
| 3. Educating Thurgood | 24 |
| 4. Waking Up | 40 |
| 5. Turkey | 52 |
| 6. His Own Man | 61 |
| 7. Getting Started | 75 |
| 8. Leaving Home | 86 |
| 9. 69 Fifth Avenue | 93 |
| 10. Marshall in Charge | 101 |
| 11. Pan of Bones | 113 |
| 12. The War Years | 122 |
| 13. Lynch Mob for a Lawyer | 131 |
| 14. Jim Crow Buster | 143 |
| 15. Groveland | 152 |
| 16. Lessons in Politics | 158 |
| 17. On the Front Line | 167 |
| 18. Direct Attack | 174 |
| 19. Number OneNegro of All Time | 187 |
| 20. Planning a Revolt | 195 |
| 21. Case of the Century | 209 |
| 22. No Radical | 228 |
| 23. Martin Luther King, Jr | 245 |
| 24. Machiavellian Marshall | 253 |
| 25. The Second Civil War | 263 |
| 26. Marshall and the Militants | 275 |
| 27. Exit Time | 284 |
| 28. Black Robes | 296 |
| 29. Johnson's Man | 313 |
| 30. Justice Marshall | 332 |
| 31. Backlash on the Court | 353 |
| 32. Hangin' On | 374 |
| 33. Resurrection | 397 |
| NOTES | 405 |
| RESOURCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY | 431 |
| PRINCIPAL CASES CITED | 437 |
| INDEX | 441 |
Anonymous
Posted June 27, 2007
For Afrikans in America, Thurgood Marshall contribute to the courts put into law that it would be aganist the law for white America'KKK' Europeans not to be Suprior to Afrikans in America, who was brought here aganist ther WILL. I am glad I read this book. I learned not only Justice Marshall who I have always idolized and miss quoted my assumption of Brown v. the Broad of Edu. Justice Marshall wanted equal through intergation and not separte but equal. I didn't like the fact that Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr. that all 3 could'nt communicate. The authro Juan Williams did a great job in writing this book I would like to have this book in my library, there is a lot of history in this book from his research. GREAT READ
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Overview
This New York Times Notable Book of the Year, 1998, is now in trade paper.From the bestselling author of Eyes on the Prize, here is the definitive biography of the great lawyer and Supreme Court justice.
From the Trade Paperback edition.