America’s unaddressed history of lynching and racial violence has left this nation vulnerable to horrific hate crimes, none more devastating than what is documented in this compelling book. We ignore Laurence Leamer’s account at our peril.” — Bryan Stevenson, author of the New York Times bestseller Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption
“Gripping and relevant.” — People
“Stirring.” — O, the Oprah Magazine
“Powerful... engrossing... and a pertinent reminder of the consequences of organized hatred.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Leamer infuses his tale with the drama of a popular novel.” — Washington Post
“For decades, Morris Dees has fearlessly demolished White Supremacist hate groups with his legal cunning. Laurence Leamer does a wonderful job in The Lynching describing how Dees put the KKK out of business . This legal thriller is destined to become a major motion picture. Highly recommended.” — Douglas Brinkley, author of The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast
“Leamer has deftly told the tragic story of the 1981 lynching of Michael Donald and the long campaign of civil rights activist Morris Dees to use unprecedented legal tactics to cripple the modern Ku Klux Klan. A narrative as powerful as any novelist could imagine.” — Dan T. Carter, author of The Politics of Rage: George Wallace, the Origins of the New Conservatism and the Transformation of American Politics
“A deftly researched history of the civil rights movement. ... Today, the Klan still exists. The Lynching reminds us why that matters.” — BookPage
“Leamer deftly translates the historical record into a tense courtroom drama.” — Atlanta Journal-Constitution
“The Lynching reveals truths that few people know and everyone should. The extraordinary story of Morris Dees, a uniquely American hero, fighting for and winning vengeance and justice in the courts.” — Arthur Bryant, Chairman, Public Justice
“This well-written, suspense-filled book vividly evokes themes from the ugly, not-so-distant past.” — Publishers Weekly
“Leamer brings... a sharp eye for tragedy... to his new book on the Michael Donald murder and its ramifications. ... Leamer does a truly remarkable job of humanizing Donald and his family, and of depicting the Mobile of the era.” — Al.com
“It is endearing to read about those willing to fight injustice with more than just thoughts and prayers but with heroic action and personal risk. In these difficult times, it is an uplifting and inspiring story.” — Bookreporter.com
“Leamer’s themes have become especially relevant today.” — The Crime Report
“Urgent and necessary.” — The Oklahoman
“Necessary reading. ... The Lynching , while of great cultural importance, reads like a courtroom drama. ... An important book.” — Under the Radar
“Laurence Leamer writes with the skill of a born storyteller. ... [A] gripping book.” — Finger Lakes Times
For decades, Morris Dees has fearlessly demolished White Supremacist hate groups with his legal cunning. Laurence Leamer does a wonderful job in The Lynching describing how Dees put the KKK out of business . This legal thriller is destined to become a major motion picture. Highly recommended.
Leamer has deftly told the tragic story of the 1981 lynching of Michael Donald and the long campaign of civil rights activist Morris Dees to use unprecedented legal tactics to cripple the modern Ku Klux Klan. A narrative as powerful as any novelist could imagine.
Gripping and relevant.
Stirring.
Leamer infuses his tale with the drama of a popular novel.
The Lynching reveals truths that few people know and everyone should. The extraordinary story of Morris Dees, a uniquely American hero, fighting for and winning vengeance and justice in the courts.
Leamer deftly translates the historical record into a tense courtroom drama.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
America’s unaddressed history of lynching and racial violence has left this nation vulnerable to horrific hate crimes, none more devastating than what is documented in this compelling book. We ignore Laurence Leamer’s account at our peril.
A deftly researched history of the civil rights movement. ... Today, the Klan still exists. The Lynching reminds us why that matters.
Urgent and necessary.
It is endearing to read about those willing to fight injustice with more than just thoughts and prayers but with heroic action and personal risk. In these difficult times, it is an uplifting and inspiring story.
Leamer brings... a sharp eye for tragedy... to his new book on the Michael Donald murder and its ramifications. ... Leamer does a truly remarkable job of humanizing Donald and his family, and of depicting the Mobile of the era.
Laurence Leamer writes with the skill of a born storyteller. ... [A] gripping book.
Necessary reading. ... The Lynching , while of great cultural importance, reads like a courtroom drama. ... An important book.
Leamer’s themes have become especially relevant today.
Leamer infuses his tale with the drama of a popular novel.
Stirring.
Leamer deftly translates the historical record into a tense courtroom drama.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
04/18/2016 The prolific Leamer (The Price of Justice)swiftly traces the entwined lives of three Alabama men—civil rights lawyer Morris Dees, Gov. George Wallace, and top Klansman Robert Shelton—during and following the civil rights movement. Bookending this tripartite biography are two legal cases concerning the 1981 murder of Michael Donald, a young black man lynched by United Klans of America (UKA) members in Mobile County. The ensuing investigation and criminal trial reveal lingering sympathies for white supremacy. During Shelton's time as imperial wizard, Klansmen had attacked Freedom Riders in collusion with local cops and bombed the 16th Street Baptist Church. Leamer details Shelton's privileged relationship with Governor Wallace, who rode populist racism into the state's executive office and ran for president, showing how Wallace stoked rage against integration while carefully distancing himself from racist violence. As a student, Dees worked for Wallace's gubernatorial campaign and had even defended a Klansman in court. By the time he files a civil lawsuit against Shelton and the UKA over Donald's death, intending to bankrupt the organization, Dees is a changed man. Leamer's slice of American civil rights history prefers courtrooms and the Capitol to churches and the streets, with Dees—a cunning and tenacious lawyer doing dangerously unpopular work—playing hero. This well-written, suspense-filled book vividly evokes themes from the ugly, not-so-distant past. Agent: Joy Harris, Joy Harris Literary Agency. (June)
04/15/2016 In 1981, members of the Ku Klux Klan murdered African American Michael Donald in Mobile, AL. Their prosecution and a subsequent civil lawsuit dealt a fatal blow to the largest U.S. Klan organization and effectively ended the protected status of the group and its members in Alabama. Leamer (The Price of Justice; The Kennedy Women) explores the tragic murder, drawing sad and telling details from interviews and court records. The middle section of the book looks back at the lives and careers of the men who would become adversaries in the courtroom: Morris Dees, the country lawyer from Montgomery who would emerge as an unlikely crusader for civil rights and who founded the influential Southern Poverty Law Center; and Robert Shelton, the leader of the United Klans of America. Leamer also traces the career of Alabama Gov. George Wallace, whose policies enabled the Klan to operate freely in the state for decades. The book closes with a dramatic account of the court case that would officially bankrupt the Klan. VERDICT Leamer skillfully weaves the facts of a single case with the story of the rise and fall of the Ku Klux Klan. Recommended for all readers interested in American history. [See Prepub Alert, 12/7/15.]—Nicholas Graham, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
★ 2016-03-31 A powerful account of how a Ku Klux Klan-sanctioned lynching in Mobile, Alabama, paved the way for legal victories against such hate groups.Prolific journalist Leamer (The Price of Justice: A True Story of Greed and Corruption, 2013, etc.) ably re-creates this ugly flash point within a sprawling narrative about race relations and white supremacy's gradual weakening, noting that even after the victories and bitterness of the 1960s, "the Klan had what appeared to be a legitimate place in Mobile life." In 1981, young Klansmen randomly murdered 19-year-old African-American Michael Donald in retaliation for an unrelated shooting. After an initially botched investigation, the FBI and Justice Department oversaw the killers' 1983 convictions. The prosecution attracted the attention of Southern Poverty Law Center founder Morris Dees, who then represented Donald's family in a civil action against the United Klans of America, whose leaders first regarded it as "an aggravating, foolish lawsuit." In the middle third of the book, Leamer uses Dees' life as a lens, his growing devotion to legal activism contrasting with the massive resistance to civil rights embodied by his one-time mentor George Wallace, another key figure. While Dees was revolted by the Klan's violence, writes the author, "for Wallace…race was simply a fantastic political issue that he intended to parlay as far as it would go." By the time of the Donald murder, the Klan seemed diminished, yet Dees still faced threats as he built a case. Leamer develops incremental, disturbing portraits of the Klansmen, terming them "less a militant militia of white supremacist storm troopers than…a motley, disparate assembly of marginal men." Concluding with a well-paced courtroom drama, the author captures the climactic improbability of Dees' success, which bankrupted the UKA. Leamer confidently untangles the legal and social aspects of the story, showing how the South has grappled with the horrific legacy Donald's murder represents. An engrossing true-crime narrative and a pertinent reminder of the consequences of organized hatred.