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4.5 

King of the North

By Jeanne Theoharis
King of the North by Jeanne Theoharis digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A Ms. Magazine Most Anticipated Book

Shortlisted 2025, Museum of African American History Stone Book Award

From the New York Times bestselling author, a radical reframing of the life and work of Martin Luther King Jr.

“Theoharis shows us through penetrating research and sensitive, scholarly insight that Dr. King not only was keenly aware of the history of antiblack racism in the North, but battled it from the very beginning of his career.” —Henry Louis Gates Jr.

The Martin Luther King Jr. of popular memory vanquished Jim Crow in the South. But in this myth-shattering book, award-winning and New York Times bestselling historian Jeanne Theoharis argues that King’s time in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago—outside Dixie—was at the heart of his campaign for racial justice. King of the North follows King as he crisscrosses the country from the Northeast to the West Coast, challenging school segregation, police brutality, housing segregation, and job discrimination. For these efforts, he was relentlessly attacked by white liberals, the media, and the federal government.

In this bold retelling, King emerges as a someone who not only led a movement but who showed up for other people’s struggles; a charismatic speaker who also listened and learned; a Black man who experienced police brutality; a minister who lived with and organized alongside the poor; and a husband who—despite his flaws—depended on Coretta Scott King as an intellectual and political guide in the national fight against racism, poverty, and war.

King of the North speaks directly to our struggles over racial inequality today. Just as she restored Rosa Parks’s central place in modern American history, so Theoharis radically expands our understanding of King’s life and work—a vision of justice unfulfilled in the present.

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King of the North Reviews

4.5
“Theoharis does not play fair when it comes to the truth. She’s next-level real. Many authors “speak truth to power,” but Theoharis takes a power hose to the whitewashing that’s tried to make our Black leaders more “palatable” to white America. She reminds us that Dr. King was battling bigotry in the North long before the end of his life, sitting on the floors of run-down Chicago apartments, meeting with gang members, and confronting housing discrimination, school segregation, and economic injustice head-on. The hypocrisy she exposes hits hard: northern leaders who welcomed King for photo ops but told him to “go back south” the moment he spoke about racism in their own cities. The book makes clear that the North was no promised land. What makes this book so powerful is how Theoharis re-centers Coretta Scott King—not as a supporting character, but as a brilliant, unwavering strategist and activist in her own right continuing the fight fearlessly after his death. This book reveals the hidden side of Dr. King’s ministry; the one America found too radical, too unfiltered, too threatening to celebrate. It’s a searing reminder that his call for justice went far beyond integration; it was about shared economics, housing equity, and dismantling systems that were never meant to include us. 5/5 ⭐️Theoharis doesn’t just take the blinders off, she rips them off, stomps on them, and hands you a clearer, sharper view of history.”

About Jeanne Theoharis

Jeanne Theoharis is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College of City University of New York. She is the author of the New York Times bestselling The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks and winner of the 2014 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work Biography/Autobiography and the Letitia Woods Brown Award from the Association of Black Women Historians. Her book has been adapted into a documentary of the same name, executive produced by Soledad O’Brien for NBC-Peacock where Theoharis served as a consulting producer. Her young adult adaptation with Brandy Colbert, The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks for Young People, was included in the Best Books of 2021 by the Chicago Public Library and Kirkus Reviews. Her book A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil Rights History won the 2018 Brooklyn Public Library Literary Prize in Nonfiction and was named one of the best Black history books of 2018 by Black Perspectives. Theoharis’s writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, MSNBC, The NationSlate, The Atlantic, and many more. She lives in Brooklyn.

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