Over twenty-two months in 1979 and 1981 nearly two dozen children were
unspeakably murdered in Atlanta despite national attention and outcry;
they were all Black. James Baldwin investigated these murders, the Black
administration in Atlanta, and Wayne Williams, the Black man tried for
the crimes. Because there was only evidence to convict Williams for the
murders of two men, the children's cases were closed, offering no
justice to the families or the country. Baldwin's incisive analysis
implicates the failures of integration as the guilt party, arguing,
"There could be no more devastating proof of this assault than the
slaughter of the children."
As Stacey Abrams writes in her foreword, "The humanity of black
children, of black men and women, of black lives, has ever been a
conundrum for America. Forty years on, Baldwin's writing reminds us that
we have never resolved the core query: Do black lives matter?
Unequivocally, the moral answer is yes, but James Baldwin refuses such
rhetorical comfort." In this, his last book, by excavating American race
relations Baldwin exposes the hard-to-face ingrained issues and demands
that we all reckon with them.