The second volume of the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography that The
Washington Post hailed as "an engrossing masterpiece"
Charismatic, singularly determined, and controversial, W.E.B. Du Bois
was a historian, novelist, editor, sociologist, founder of the NAACP,
advocate of women's rights, and the premier architect of the Civil
Rights movement. His hypnotic voice thunders out of David Levering
Lewis's monumental biography like a locomotive under full steam.
This second volume of what is already a classic work begins with the
triumphal return from WWI of African American veterans to the shattering
reality of racism and lynching even as America discovers the New Negro
of literature and art. In stunning detail, Lewis chronicles the
little-known political agenda behind the Harlem Renaissance and Du
Bois's relentless fight for equality and justice, including his
steadfast refusal to allow whites to interpret the aspirations of black
America. Seared by the rejection of terrified liberals and the black
bourgeoisie during the Communist witch-hunts, Du Bois ended his days in
uncompromising exile in newly independent Ghana. In re-creating the
turbulent times in which he lived and fought, Lewis restores the
inspiring and famed Du Bois to his central place in American history.