

Among his many topics: Martin Luther King Jr.

In prose that is eloquent and impassioned-sometimes hopeful, sometimes not-the author presses his fingers on our bruises, the ones many of us would prefer to ignore. Repeatedly, the author examines “the ugliness of who we are”-and of the men we have elected president (Reagan and Trump do not come off well).

In this follow-up to his 2016 book, Democracy in Black: How Race Still Enslaves the American Soul, the author mines that work to illustrate our ongoing inability to confront what both Baldwin and Glaude call the lie at the center of our American self-conception and how the nation refuses “to turn its back on racism and to reach for its better angels.” Glaude employs a blend of genres: some biography of Baldwin (the text ends at Baldwin’s gravesite), literary analysis of key works, memoir (first-person appears throughout), and pieces of American history, especially those events that many of us don’t want to think about. Glaude, a frequent guest on political talk shows and chair of the African American Studies department at Princeton, has long read, admired, and taught Baldwin’s work. A penetrating study of how the words of James Baldwin (1924-1987) continue to have (often painful) relevance today.
