Carry ME Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution

Carry ME Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution

by Diane Mc Whorter (Author)

Synopsis

The Year of Birmingham, 1963, was a cataclysmic turning point in America's long civil rights struggle. That spring, child demonstrators faced down police dogs and fire hoses in huge nonviolent marches for desegregation. A few months later, Ku Klux Klansmen retaliated by bombing the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and killing four young black girls. Diane McWhorter, journalist and daughter of a prominent Birmingham family, weaves together police and FBI documents, interviews with black activists and former Klansmen, and personal memories into an extraordinary narrative of the city, the personalities, and the events that brought about America's second emancipation.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 720
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Published: 25 Feb 2002

ISBN 10: 0743217721
ISBN 13: 9780743217729

Media Reviews
Francine Prose

O Magazine

Her narrative takes on the suspense of a detective novel.... Carry Me Home is an ambitious, panoramic history with enough personal memoir to make us see why Diane McWhorter cannot forget -- and wants us to remember -- the momentous events that took place during one historic year in one Alabama city.


Craig Flournoy

The Dallas Morning News

The product of nineteen years of research, Carry Me Home is a brilliant work of history.


Jon Wiener

The Nation

The most important book on the movement since Taylor Branch's Parting the Waters. It should become a classic.


The New Yorker

McWhorter's own involvement in the story...reenergizes the struggle, serving as a reminder that history is always personal.


The Washington Post Book World

Carry Me Home is a case study in how the privileged and powerful can operate behind the scenes to control and, when it is in their interests, undermine and corrupt the social fabric.


David Herbert Donald

Author of Lincoln

A tour de force, comparable in importance to J. Anthony Lukas's Common Ground and Taylor Branch's Parting the Waters. Carry Me Home is destined to become a classic in the history of the civil rights revolution.


Ellen Dahnke

The Tennessean

Birmingham's story will strike a chord with every Southerner who lived through that crucible, but it is as much a tribute to McWhorter's gifts that readers will feel as if they walk Birmingham's streets during that period as if through their own hometown.


Francine Prose

O Magazine

Her narrative takes on the suspense of a detective novel.... Carry Me Home is an ambitious, panoramic history with enough personal memoir to make us see why Diane McWhorter cannot forget -- and wants us to remember -- the momentous events that took place during one historic year in one Alabama city.


Paul Rosenberg

The Denver Post

McWhorter's remarkable clarity and candor, her relentless focus on the enormous forces of stasis, reaction and accommodation that defined life in Birmingham, illuminate this past so vividly we cannot avoid the unspoken challenge to finally come to terms with it, however difficult that may yet be.

Paul Rosenberg


Publishers Weekly (starred)

The story of civil rights in Birmingham, Alabama, has been told before -- from the unspeakable violence to the simple, courageous decencies -- but fresh, sometimes startling details distinguish this doorstop page-turner told by a daughter of the city's white elite. [McWhorter] brings a gripping pace and an unusual, twofold perspective to her account, incorporating her viewpoint as a child...as well as her adult viewpoint as an avid scholar and journalist.


Harper Barnes

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Diane McWhorter's powerful moral epic about the civil rights movement in Birmingham, Alabama, contains all the elements of first-rate history, including dauntingly thorough research, a sure grasp of the big picture as well as the tiny details that illuminate it, evocative writing that brings action and character springing off the page, and a novelist's sense of how to mold a compelling narrative arc out of the innumerable molecules of historical fact.


David Herbert Donald author of Lincoln A tour de force, comparable in importance to J. Anthony Lukas's Common Ground and Taylor Branch's Parting the Waters.

Carry Me Home is destined to become a classic in the history of the civil rights revolution.