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Paperback My Soul Is Rested: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement in the Deep South Book

ISBN: 0140067531

ISBN13: 9780140067538

My Soul Is Rested: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement in the Deep South

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Book Overview

"A superb oral history." --The Washington Post Book World

"So touching, so exhilarating...no book for a long time has left me so moved or so happy." --The New York Times Book Review

The almost unfathomable courage and the undying faith that propelled the Civil Rights Movement are brilliantly captured in these moving personal recollections. Here are the voices of leaders and followers, of ordinary people who became...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

More good stories

One of the best first hand accounts of the civil rights movement I have read. There were things in this book you will not find in the history books. A must read

Extraordinary account of an extraordinary time.

Howell Raines is the new executive editor for "The New York Times," but he is at heart a writer. Both strengths come to the fore in this excellent book on the American civil rights movement. As an oral history, it necessarily contains first-hand accounts of dozens and dozens of the main (and not-so-important) players in the movement. Raines does a fine and fair job of putting their stories into essentially chronological order and editing or moving bits and pieces only where necessary to ensure good flow for the reader. There were a few names I had heard of before, but many were new to me. There are surprises in this book. While we mostly associate the civil rights movement with the deep south in the mid-1960s, it actually got its start in Chicago in the 1940s when groups of people protested with the first lunch-counter sit-ins (when a manager came out to scold one of these groups with the flat, "We don't serve colored folks here," one quick-witted participant fired back, "That's OK, we don't eat 'em!"). Another revelation was the tensions between the older blacks and the younger black student generation. The older blacks, while not happy with segregation, sometimes felt that at least everyone knew where they stood with it--while the younger generation was champing at the bit to get out there and change the world overnight. Finally, it was interesting to read that many of the original founders of the movement were inspired far more by Gandhi than by Martin Luther King, Jr. A number of them express their opinion that King--while undoubtedly important and absolutely essential once the movement got underway--was not himself so convinced as to the value of a) the movement itself and b) non-violent protest--many of this friends and co-workers say here that he continued to espouse it only because eventually, he felt he had been thoroughly and unmistakeably identified with it. Although I was surprised that neither Coretta Scott King nor the Reverend Jesse Jackson were inteviewed for Mr. Raines' book, their absence is my only quibble with what is otherwise an enormously valuable and terrifically readable history.

An empowering book to read!

It was difficult to stop reading the book, once I started. This collection of interviews with the idealists, the activists, the real "fighters" in the civil rights movement in the 50s and 60s -- and the people who stood against them -- is an empowering, educational read. Truly, this book is a must for those interested in learning more about the civil rights struggle (a struggle that continues until today), and about movements for peace and social justice in general.

A "must-have" book on the civil rights movement.

This is an excellent book that provides a unique perspective on the civil rights movement. The author does an excellent job of compiling interviews not only from important leaders of that era, but also from the common man/woman/child you rearely hear from. This a unique perspective not often found.

A must read on the civil rights movement.

Mr.Raines in true reporters form asks the questions that needed to be asked of those people who took part in the civil rights movement. Yet, one see that the author,a native Southern,had some feelings for those men who played the role of vilians in the South, in tha he asked them questions that no one else had never asked of them.
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