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Author Risen, Clay.

Title A nation on fire : America in the wake of the King assassination / Clay Risen.

Publication Info. Hoboken, N.J. : John Wiley & Sons, [2009]
©2009

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Plainville Public Library - Non Fiction  973.923 RIS    Check Shelf
Description xii, 292 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 257-282) and index.
Contents King, Johnson, and the terrible, glorious thirty-first day of March -- April 4: before the bullet -- April 4: the news arrives -- April 4: U and Fourteenth -- April 5: midnight interlude -- April 5: "Any man's death diminishes me" -- April 5: "Once that line has been crossed" -- April 5: "Official disorder on top of civil disorder" -- April 5: the occupation of Washington -- April 5: "There are no ghettos in Chicago" -- April 6: roadblocks -- April 6: an eruption in Baltimore -- April 7: Palm Sunday -- April 8: Bluff city on edge -- April 9: a country rent asunder -- April 10 and 11: two speeches -- A summer postscript -- 1969 and after.
Summary "Lyndon Johnson got the call a few minutes after 7 p.m.: 'Mr. President, Martin Luther King has been shot.' Within hours, rioting had engulfed Washington, D.C. Before the violence was over, the US Army occupied three major American cities, and National Guard units patrolled a dozen more. The riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968, delivered a death blow to the liberal dream of the 1960s, gave new life to the faltering conservative political movement, and launched urban America into a downward spiral from which much of it has never recovered. In an epic narrative, Risen shows how a mere ten days - between Lyndon Johnson's withdrawal from the 1968 campaign on March 31 to King's death on April 4 to Johnson's signature of the 1968 Civil Rights Act on April 11 - literally rewrote the course of American history, from race relations to urban decline to presidential politics."--Book jacket.
Subject King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968 -- Assassination.
Race riots -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
Inner cities -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
African Americans -- Social conditions -- 1964-1975.
United States -- Race relations.
United States -- Social conditions -- 20th century.
ISBN 0470177101 cloth
9780470177105 cloth
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