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Book reviews for "Wells-Barnett,_Ida_B." sorted by average review score:

Ida B. Wells : Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin Co (17 January, 2000)
Authors: Dennis Brindell Fradin and Judith Bloom Fradin
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True American Hero
It is a travesty that the name of Ida B. Wells-Barnett is not more widely known in the most common lists of American heroes. This great woman, though little in stature, was a giant in the fight for justice and racial equality in this country. This book was a very thorough look at the life of an early champion of the civil rights movement in America. After my chilren an I read about her being physically thrown off a railcar, sueing the railroad company and actually winning her lawsuit, we could not put the book down. Although many of the discriptions and photographs were gruesome, they offered a realistic and brutally honest look at the horrors of lynching. I would recommend this book for sixth grade and up.

Eye-opening, vivid, highly recommended!
Grades 5 and up will find this an excellent biographicalcoverage of the mother of the civil rights movement, providing 178pages packed with facts and black and white illustrations. Thisexamines the life and times of Ida Wells, considering her early years, her civil rights campaign, and her anti-lynching campaign which succeeded in nearly abolishing the popular practice. An eye-opening account of not only her life, but her times. Highly recommended and vivid.

An Absolutely Outstanding Biography of an Amazing Woman
If you are not familiar with Ida B. Wells and her work, by allmeans become so immediately. I will be recommending this book toeveryone I know, and I am a children's and young adult librarian. Ida B. Wells is one of the greatest Americans of all time, and most of us have never heard of her. What she did to better the lives of African-Americans and, especially, to stop lynching, is moving, stirring, and heartbreaking. I never knew that people were burned at the stake in the USA, but they certainly were--and the crowds who came to see them die were happy to have so much fun watching "the nigger burn". A great book.


To Keep the Waters Troubled: The Life of Ida B. Wells
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (January, 1999)
Authors: Linda McMurry Edwards and Linda O. McMurry
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This book deftly describes a great woman in difficult times.
This book is interesting and easy to read, but hard to take. Ida B. Wells-Barnett was a complex person: incredibly smart, brave and strong, but at the same time, prickly and ultra sensative.The book also puts America's current racial and gender problems into perspective, showing us that we haven't come very far from the late 19th century's attitudes toward and treatment of African-Americans and women. This book is a must-read for anyone who cares about a great American or wants to face and learn more about America's shameful history. That said, the author's style makes it easy to read. Amazingly enough for a scholarly biography, I would often find myself reading late into the night because I couldn't put it down.

A worthy treatise about a magnificent American
McMurray's biography of Ida B. Wells-Barnett is a rare triumph. Wells-Barnett was a courageous American whose valor is depicted in full color. All too frequently, when there is a discussion of the impact of race, there is a mistaken assumption that black males comprise the affected population. Similarly, when gender is raised as an issue, the false assumption is that white women are the only ones to be affected. Wells-Barnett was an American woman of African descent who fought the societally-mandated strictures of race and sex until her death. I am emboldened by her deeds since too many of the same strictures still exist. I applaud McMurray for her scholarship in this biography's portrayal of the life of Wells-Barnett. This book is definitely recommended.

An excellent history not only of Wells, but of the times.
I came away from this book with new respect for Wells, and her courage. I was overwhelmed with sadness after reading some of the details of the lynchings and the effect on the survivors. The book contains an excellent analysis of the real reason for many lynchings:economic competition.


Black Foremothers: Three Lives (Women's Lives/Women's Work)
Published in Paperback by The Feminist Press at CUNY (March, 1988)
Authors: Dorothy Sterling and Barbara Christian
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A "Must Read" in Black History and Women's History
Ellen Craft, Ida B. Wells-Barnett and Mary Church Terrell should be familiar names to anyone interested in women's history or black history. Unfortunately, too few are aware of all three women.

The author accompanies brief (40 pages) well-written biographies of each woman with photographs and a timeline of key events in her life. The introduction provides an overview of the significance of each woman, and there is an excellent bibliography.


The Other Reconstruction : Where Violence and Womanhood Meet in the Writings of Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Angelina Weld Grimke, and Nella Larsen (Studies in African American History and Culture)
Published in Hardcover by Garland Publishing (November, 1999)
Authors: Erica M. Miller and Erick Miller
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A Compelling Analysis of Post-Reconstruction Literature
Dr. Ericka Miller has intricately weaved the divergent themes of Wells-Barnett, Grimke, and Larsen into a cogent analysis of post-Reconstruction literature. Each of these authors examined the social and political injustices that existed in the United States following the Civil War, but each brought a different approach to the common problems facing a society still coming to terms with the consequences of the secession and ultimate defeat of the Confederacy.

Once again, Dr. Miller's ability to bring synergy to these author's writings is an impressive accomplishment. I recommend this book to my students, my colleagues, and anyone else interested in the literature of our most trying era.

Bringing life to academic writing
The Other Reconstruction is an insightful examination of a difficult period in American history and the literature that helped to illuminate it. But this work is as remarkable for its style as its content. One rarely finds a Ph.D. thesis worthy of printing for the general public, much less one as readable as Dr. Miller's. She has brought life to academic writing without detracting from its substance. In doing so, she reminds us that literature isn't just about A story. It's about HIStory.


Crusade for Justice; The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells.
Published in Paperback by University of Chicago Press (Trd) (April, 1991)
Authors: Ida B. Wells, Alfreda M. Duster, and Ada B. Wells
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Crusade for Justice by Ida B. Wells
This book sin't really anything special although it is interesting.The author describes her life all the way from her childhood where most of her family died, and through her success as a teacher and a newspaper editor who fought for freedom of speech in her articles.I recommend this book for those who are interested in the history after 1800s and how life went on at that time.Overall,it is a good book but I found it boring at times.

An early voice
I read 'Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells' as part of a class in ethical and prophetic witness for seminary. This was, frankly, not the kind of book I was likely to read apart from a class assignment. But I am very glad to have been given the opportunity -- sometimes things we have to do are in fact good for us!

Ida B. Wells was an African-American woman of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. She was born and grew up in the South, born in Mississippi during the Civil War. It is significant the impact of the legacy of slavery on her life -- she recounts how her parents, who were married as slaves, remarried each other as free persons after the war. Wells was a determined and intelligent woman -- her parents died while she was young, yet old enough to be left with the responsibility of her younger brothers and sisters. At the age of 14 she found herself at the head of a household with five younger children.

She worked hard to make sure that her education did not suffer, and eventually (a rarity for women of any colour in America at the time) went to work for a newspaper.

In an incident that foreshadowed Rosa Parks, she was once removed from a train for sitting in the wrong section, despite her ownership of a valid ticket for the seat. She sued the railroad and won (newspaper headlines read 'Darky Damsel Gets Damages' without concern for the racist tone), but the judgment was overturned on appeal, and she later discovered her lawyers had been paid off by the railroads, and the appellate judges had thought she was just being uppity to pursue the matter.

Such was the state of the African-American community that none came to her assistance as she pursued this fight. This made her more determined to organise and fight.

Several of her newspaper partners and other friends in Memphis were lynched for these efforts, and Wells was threatened herself, and left the South, but did not give up her crusade. Where ever she went, through cities and towns in the North as well as over to Europe (where, she said, she felt like she was treated as a real human being equal with others for the first time) she decried the injustice of laws which dismissed charges or gave light sentences if victims were coloured, and prosecuted more strongly, gave out harsher sentences, or even resorted to lynch mobs if the defendant (who was often not guilty) was coloured.

'She fought a lonely and almost single-handed fight, with the single-mindedness of a crusader, long before men or women of any race entered the arena, and the measure of success she achieved goes far beyond the credit she has been given the history of the country.'

She continued speaking and publishing up to her death in 1931. She was never afraid of making herself unpopular, and often upset the African-American community by being critical of their complacency (especially the upper and middle classes). She became unpopular by standing against the military service during World War I, because of prejudicial and discriminatory practices, and never quite recovered in popular esteem from that.

But Wells had courage and determination that is rare in persons, male or female, of any colour, of any time, to take on such a task as the exposition and combat of lynching in the South during the post-Civil War decades. Talking directly with governors and even a president, Wells made her voice heard, and it was a difficult hearing in a difficult time.

Redundant read is not important but the life of Wells is
Even though some of the material in this book is redundant, this is an opportunity to read primary source material about the actions and reactions of a woman many of us know little about. Learning about Ida B. Wells in the first person puts you into the times in which she lived. There is no way a biography can give you the same experience. This is a book I would recommend to anyone wanting to understand this period of our history and the personalities--their strengths and limits--that dominated the crusades of those times. I like knowing about Wells' frailties as well as her strengths and the insights that she shared. And I like hearing her viewpoints about other leaders of her time. The three star ratings may say something about the readability of the book, but not about what you gain by staying the course.


Ida B. Wells-Barnett: A Voice Against Violence (Great African Americans Series)
Published in Library Binding by Enslow Publishers, Inc. (April, 1991)
Authors: Patricia C. McKissack and Fredrick L. McKissack
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Ida B. Wells-Barnett: A Voice Against Violence
I located this book at a branch of the Nashville Public Library a few years ago while doing research for a wood carving of Ida B. Wells. Of course the text is meant for a juvenile audience, but it was a very good source of pictures of Ida B.Wells and by that time more pictures were the main thing I needed.It gives a good if brief review of her life.


On Lynchings: Southern Horrors, a Red Record Mob Rule in New Orleans
Published in Hardcover by Ayer Co Pub (August, 1990)
Authors: Ida B. Wells and Ida B. Wells-Barnett
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Man's Inhumanity to Man
The detractors of this book are its old-fashioned language and tendency to be repetitive. These literary faux pas, however, do not detract from Wells-Barnett's depiction of the brutality and injustices suffered by black men accused (not convicted, but merely accused) of crimes in the nineteenth century with particular emphasis paid to the case of Robert Charles, a black man at the center of the 1900 New Orleans race riot. Wells-Barnett offers several accounts of black men tortured and murdered by mobs of angry, white citizens in details so graphic as to make more sensitive readers physically ill. What this book does brilliantly is capture the irrational violence caused by mass hysteria and the unthinkable cruelty human beings are capable of.


The Memphis Diary of Ida B. Wells (Black Women Writers Series)
Published in Hardcover by Beacon Press (January, 1995)
Authors: Miriam Decosta-Willis, Ida B. Wells, and Ida B. Wells-Barnett
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Black Foremothers
Published in Paperback by The Feminist Press at CUNY (February, 1988)
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Ida B Wells-Barnett
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Author: Suzanne Freedman
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