Book Details Title: Wilmington’s Lie: The Murderous Coup of 1898 and the Rise of White Supremacy | |
Book DescriptionAmazon.com Review Usually, when we read history, we at least have a cursory knowledge of the subject at hand. Sometimes, however, a book comes along that just surprises. How did we not know about this before? we ask ourselves. Wilmington’s Lie is such a book. After the Civil War, Wilmington, North Carolina prospered. It was the state’s largest city, with a busy port and a mixed race community that featured a burgeoning black middle class. But in 1898, a group of white supremacists decided to do something to turn back the page. David Zucchino’s well-researched book delivers an account of one of the few times a group of people has violently overthrown the government in this country. Although the violence that swept over Wilmington’s black community was later covered up as “a race riot,” this was a blatant act of racism, a brutal stab for power. We did not have to wait long for the first great history book of the new decade. —Chris Schluep Read more Review Praise for Wilmington’s Lie:“Brilliant…Zucchino, a contributing writer for the New York Times, does not overwrite the scenes. His moral judgement stands at a distance. He simply describes what happened and the lies told to justify it all…The details contained in the last part of the book are heart-wrenching. With economy and a cinematic touch, Zucchino recounts the brutal assault on black Wilmington.”―New York Times “In Wilmington’s Lie, David Zucchino, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who has covered conflicts around the world, punctures the myths surrounding the insurrection and provides a dynamic and detailed account of the lives of perpetrators and victims…Deeply researched and profoundly relevant, Wilmington’s Lie explains how [the coup] happened and suggests how much work remains to be done to come to terms with what took place.”―Washington Post“This is an amazing story.”―Dave Davies, NPR’s Fresh Air “David Zucchino offers a gripping account of one of the most disturbing, though virtually unknown, political events in American history…Thanks to Mr. Zucchino’s unflinching account, we now have the full, appalling story. As befits a serious journalist, he avoids polemics and lets events speak for themselves. Wilmington’s Lie joins a growing shelf of works that unpeel the brutal realities of the post-Civil War South…it is books such as these, not least Wilmington’s Lie, that have redeemed the truth of post-Civil War history from the tenacious mythology of racism.”―Wall Street Journal “Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Zucchino cuts through a century of propaganda, myth, and big white lies to unmask the stunning history of the Wilmington coup, its origins in the political climate of the era, and its far-reaching implications for North Carolina and the rest of the resurgent Confederacy in the decades that followed.”―New York Journal of Books “Wilmington’s Lie is a riveting and mesmerizing page turner, with lessons about racial violence that echo loudly today.”―BookPage “Usually, when we read history, we at least have a cursory knowledge of the subject at hand. Sometimes, however, a book comes along that just surprises. How did we not know about this before? we ask ourselves. Wilmington’s Lie is such a book…We did not have to wait long for the first great history book of the new decade.” ―Chris Schluep, Amazon “Best of January” Selection “Pierces layers of myth and invented history . . . Wilmington’s Lie reconstructs the only violent overthrow of an elected government in U.S. history, tying the white supremacist bloodshed to political goals that are still relevant today.”―Shelf Awareness “Extremely compelling and convincing…Even astute readers of history and civil rights will be alarmed by this story, which is why it should be read. For fans of American history, politics, and civil rights.”―Library Journal“Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Zucchino delivers a searing chronicle of the November 1898 white supremacist uprising in Wilmington, N.C., that overthrew the municipal government…Drawing on a wealth of primary sources, Zucchino paints a disturbing portrait of the massacre and how it was covered up by being described as a “race riot” sparked by African-Americans. This masterful account reveals a shameful chapter in American history.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review) “Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Zucchino shines his reporter’s spotlight on what he aptly calls a murderous coup as well as exploring its background and longterm consequences…The result is both a page-turner and a sobering reminder of democracy’s fragility.”―Booklist “A searing and still-relevant tale of racial injustice at the turn of the 20th century… A book that does history a service by uncovering a shameful episode, one that resonates strongly today.”―Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “One of the great journalists of our time has placed his discerning eye on the steaming cauldron of our shared racial history. The result is this extraordinary book written with the superb quality and journalistic excellence that is Zucchino’s trademark.” ―James McBride, National Book Award–winning author of The Good Lord Bird “David Zucchino is one of the finest foreign correspondents I have ever worked with in 40 years of journalism. Now imagine you take someone with David’s reporting skills and transport him back in history to 1898 and Wilmington, North Carolina. And you tell him to tell us the story of the only violent overthrow of an elected government in American history. It was perpetrated by white supremacists seeking to reverse the remarkable advances in racial pluralism in Wilmington of that day―a positive example that was primed to spread throughout the state, and beyond. What you end up with is a gripping, cannot-put-down book that is both history and a distant mirror on just how much can go wrong in this great country of ours when populist politicians play the race card without restraint.”―Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times columnist“A staggeringly great book, both thrilling and tragic, shining light on a dark passage of American history.” ―Tim Weiner, National Book Award–winning author of Legacy of Ashes “Wilmington’s Lie is riveting and meticulously reported and powerfully written. It is also scalding and revelatory. As David Zucchino shows with relentless drama, the end of the Civil War was not the end of slavery but the beginning of a period more terrifying, the unchecked rise of white supremacy that culminated in a day of unparalleled blood in a North Carolina coastal town. It is a forgotten chapter in American history. Zucchino has now made it an unforgettable one.” ―Buzz Bissinger, author of Friday Night LightsPraise for David Zucchino: “Even a very short, victorious shooting war against a disorganized, dispirited, vastly outnumbered and underequipped enemy is hell. That is the central message that Los Angeles Times correspondent Zucchino brings home startlingly well in this riveting account of the American military’s lightning capture of Baghdad in April 2003…[A] high-quality example of in-depth and evocative war reporting.”―Publishers Weekly, on Thunder Run “Zucchino does not obscure the ugliness―including welfare recipients who embrace dependence―that surrounds them, but what stands out is the resilience of these women in the face of events that would be insurmountable tragedies for most middle- and upper-class Americans. It is unlikely this book will engender new and widespread respect for welfare mothers, for the ‘welfare queen’ myth draws its strength from what people want to believe, not misperceptions of reality. But by setting aside presuppositions and moral judgments to simply describe what he finds, Zucchino offers a substantive image of life on welfare.”―Kirkus Reviews, on Myth of the Welfare Queen Read more About the Author David Zucchino is a contributing writer for The New York Times. He has covered wars and civil conflicts in more than three dozen countries. Zucchino was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his dispatches from apartheid South Africa and is a four-time Pulitzer Prize finalist for his reporting from Iraq, Lebanon, Africa, and inner-city Philadelphia. He is the author of Thunder Run and Myth of the Welfare Queen. Read more Customers Review: This is a highly researched chronicle of the years immediately following the Civil War, specifically the resistance mounted by Democrats who refused to recognize and respect the freemen status of former slaves. What initially begins to emerge is a gripping story of the network the Democrats quietly built out and eventually created to tragically undermine the rules set forth following their defeat in the war, and their refusal to abide by the new federal laws that had been put in place.As riveting as this five-star subject matter is, however, the author, unfortunately, lacks the honed skill set of a writer such as David McCollough, for instance, whose writing about history rises to the level of the subject matter and keeps the reader utterly glued to the material. When I first started reading this book, I couldn’t wait to get home and pick up reading where I left off, but it didn’t take long until picking up the book started to feel like a chore, and this subject matter surely deserves much more than that. History is anything but boring, so I have a hard time with authors who make it so.In any case, at some point I started skimming rather than reading the book, eventually reaching the Epilogue, where the author jumps to the present with huge omissions of the kinds of events and heavily-researched facts he favored in the rest of the book. He neglects to offer anywhere near the same type of thoroughness in his epilogue as he does in the Wilmington chapters, which made it seem as though the epilogue was a tacked-on codicil designed to quickly vindicate Democrats as a whole for the incalculable damage done by the coup in Wilmington and the tragic repercussions that followed for decades. Vindication for something like that is a tough sell, so if that was the point of the epilogue, it failed to work for me. If that wasn’t the point of the epilogue, I’m not sure why it was even there… at least in its present form.This is an extremely important and tragic chapter in our nation’s history, so I wish the author had rendered a more readably engaging account of it. I think more people would read this book if he had.Five stars for the subject matter. |