America in 1982: Japanese car companies are on the rise and believed to
be putting U.S. autoworkers out of their jobs. Anti-Asian American
sentiment simmers, especially in Detroit. A bar fight turns fatal,
leaving a Chinese American man, Vincent Chin, beaten to death at the
hands of two white men, autoworker Ronald Ebens and his stepson, Michael
Nitz.
Paula Yoo has crafted a searing examination of the killing and the trial
and verdicts that followed. When Ebens and Nitz pled guilty to
manslaughter and received only a $3,000 fine and three years' probation,
the lenient sentence sparked outrage. The protests that followed led to
a federal civil rights trial--the first involving a crime against an
Asian American--and galvanized what came to be known as the Asian
American movement.
Extensively researched from court transcripts, contemporary news
accounts, and in-person interviews with key participants, From a
Whisper to a Rallying Cry is a suspenseful, nuanced, and authoritative
portrait of a pivotal moment in civil rights history, and a man who
became a symbol against hatred and racism.