Review by Booklist Review
Journalist, activist, podcaster, and social media influencer King, declared by Time magazine to be one of the 25 most important people in the world online, presents a mix of memoir and motivational treatise. His philosophy can sound simple: "It's about living intentionally, guided by hopes and goals and decisions, instead of allowing the actions of other people and corporations to drag you along every day." But King goes into instructive detail when recounting his use of social media to support families seeking justice after police killings, and how he used Twitter and Facebook to raise money for kids' organizations. After working extensively in the Black Lives Matters movement, King worked with a group called Real Justice, "which was focused on helping to elect compassionate, accessible, reform-minded district attorneys throughout the country," and which resulted in big wins. Like many online activists, King has been the subject of public scrutiny and criticism, but he also has some powerful supporters, including Bernie Sanders, who contributed the book's foreword, and a large, appreciative following.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Prominent commentator and activist King is a magnet for many seeking a way forward to a more equitable America.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
King, a journalist and Black Lives Matter activist, debuts with an impassioned guide to becoming an "effective change agent" in a time of "deep systematic widespread suffering and oppression." Drawing on the work of 19th-century German historian Leopold von Ranke, King contends that human history "alternate back and forth between improvement and regression," and describes the current political moment--including Donald Trump's election and the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va.--as a reaction to America's first black president. To bring an end to this period of social decline, King writes, activists must identify the "one single problem" they're most motivated to solve; he traces his own involvement in the Black Lives Matter movement to his biracial background and the abuse he endured at the hands of white classmates in Versailles, Ky. In the book's most effective sections, King offers directives ("whatever your gift is, bring it to the table"; "find your offline, real-life community, plug in, and get to work") illustrated by his own experiences as an organizer. Readers familiar with King from his prolific social media presence will appreciate the book's autobiographical details, while those new to his work may wish for a tighter focus on the nuts and bolts of organizing for change. Nevertheless, this fervent exhortation succeeds in making the case that the time for progressives to act is now. (Apr.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A blend of memoir and manifesto by Black Lives Matter leader King. Born in 1979, the author was already a well-known activist, using social media for progressive causes, when a friend and Morehouse College classmate sent him a note advising him of a YouTube post showing the infamous 2014 "I can't breathe" killing of Eric Garner by New York police. "The case and the injustice of the murder…consumed me from that day forward," he writes. "I took it personally." He dug deep to discover that the NYPD had banned the chokehold that killed Garner two decades earlier and discovered that police across the country "have shot and killed an average of three people a day," most of whom never made the national news cycle, especially if they were members of ethnic minorities. Things are worse than ever, King writes, in a book that shares the spirit of Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals. The institutions that ostensibly protect all citizens are crumbling, gradually overcome by a creeping fascism that has risen slowly and stealthily over decades. What's to be done? "Making change isn't theoretical," writes the author. "You have to get out there and fight for it. You have to be in the game, in the campaign, in the war." Of course, that fight will involve losing some battles, as King's mentor Bernie Sanders, who provides the foreword, has experienced, and it's likely to be met by objections on the part of well-meaning people: "Nobody believes in me," "I'll start later," "I'm afraid of failure." There's no time for all that, and King advises instead getting out and becoming involved in grassroots movements: "Don't be pushy to the point of weirdness, but exchange information, and let them know that you are hoping to volunteer alongside them and could start immediately." That encouragement is welcome, and in any event, writes King, those who oppose democratic change are busy on their end: "They are not passive defenders of the status quo but deliberate, forceful advocates of it." A vigorous complement to other primers in political activism and social justice. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.