Going Down Jericho Road

The Memphis Strike, Martin Luther King's Last Campaign

Michael K Honey author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:WW Norton & Co

Published:15th Feb '08

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Going Down Jericho Road cover

Memphis in 1968 was ruled by a paternalistic "plantation mentality" embodied in its good-old-boy mayor, Henry Loeb. Wretched conditions, abusive white supervisors, poor education, and low wages locked most black workers into poverty. Then two sanitation workers were chewed up like garbage in the back of a faulty truck, igniting a public employee strike that brought to a boil long-simmering issues of racial injustice.

With novelistic drama and rich scholarly detail, Michael Honey brings to life the magnetic characters who clashed on the Memphis battlefield: stalwart black workers; fiery black ministers; volatile, young, black-power advocates; idealistic organizers and tough-talking unionists; the first black members of the Memphis city council; the white upper crust who sought to prevent change or conflagration; and, finally, the magisterial Martin Luther King Jr., undertaking a Poor People's Campaign at the crossroads of his life, vilified as a subversive, hounded by the FBI, and seeing in the working poor of Memphis his hopes for a better America.

"...brilliant in the way it delineates the economic benefits to Southern society of American apartheid... it is also stirring in portraying the strike leaders, ordinary workers who risked everything to establish their basic rights in the face of arrogant and condescending power." Michael Carlson, The Spectator"

  • Winner of International Labor History Association Book Award 2008
  • Winner of Organization of American Historians Liberty Legacy Award 2008
  • Winner of Robert F. Kennedy Book Award 2008

ISBN: 9780393330533

Dimensions: 208mm x 140mm x 33mm

Weight: 518g

640 pages