Shocking the Conscience is an eyewitness account of one of the most moving and turbulent periods in American history. Simeon Booker was there. He saw it with his own eyes and used the power of his pen to spread the word. This book tells the story of a people's struggle to be free and the sacrifice that it took to bring down the walls of separation and division in America.--Congressman John Lewis
Shocking the Conscience is an indispensable and overdue book that fills an important gap in the history of the coverage of race in America. As the Washington bureau chief for
Jet and
Ebony during five decades, Simeon Booker knew everyone who mattered, went everywhere that news occurred, and covered every major story in the struggle for racial equality. As a journalist, Booker had a front-row seat to the full sweep of the history of civil rights. Now, his insider's eyewitness account adds a crucial perspective to the history of American journalism. Picking up where
The Race Beat left off, Booker shows us the challenges of covering race in America from the vantage point of the most important African American news media of the day.
Shocking the Conscience will be required reading for anyone who wants a full understanding of this transformation in our nation's history.--Christopher B. Daly, associate professor of journalism at Boston University and author of Covering America: A Narrative History of a Nation's Journalism
Shocking the Conscience tells a story that needs to be told about the courage and determination of a black journalist during the civil rights era. Because of the relationship that developed with the family, Booker's coverage of the murder of Emmett Till in particular provides unique insights. Journalists, we often say, write the first draft of history; Booker's story behind the story holds up well.--Jacqueline Thomas, former Washington bureau chief of the Detroit News
A history of Booker's 65-year journalism career, which explains how blacks went from being completely ignored in the mainstream press to being the focus of heavy coverage of the civil rights movement, and the role of Booker's civil rights reporting in
Jet magazine.
Booker, a humble man with thick glasses, covered many major events during his long career, including many epochal civil rights moments, including the desegregation of Little Rock's Central High School, and the administrations of ten presidents.
'As one of the nation's leading black writers, he never seemed terribly impressed with the important role he was playing in journalistic history, ' says Moses Newson, who worked as a reporter for the Afro-American newspapers and covered many of the same events.--Amber Larkins "American Journalism Review"
An eyewitness to more than a half century of civil rights history, Simeon Booker has given us a riveting narrative of his experiences as a black reporter in the segregated South together with the often unsung role of the black press in reporting and shaping the story.
Shocking the Conscience should be required reading for every young person. Booker describes with journalistic detail the Emmett Till trial. He was there. This is history as it was lived and observed by one of journalism's giants.--Eleanor Clift, contributor, Newsweek and the Daily Beast
As a reporter for
Ebony and
Jet magazines, Simeon Booker chronicled some of the biggest social and political events of the twentieth century. For fifty years, Booker's coverage of the civil rights movement was a fixture in many homes.-- "NPR, July 16, 2007"
During his fifty-three years as Washington, DC, bureau chief for
Jet magazine, [Booker] earned the distinction of being called 'the dean of black journalists in the nation's capital.'-- "Jet, Feb. 12, 2007"
Focusing considerably more on the dramatic heyday of civil rights in the 1950s and '60s than on Booker's later career,
Shocking the Conscience is a readable, personal, and often moving portrait of grass-roots struggles, high politics, and the role of black journalists who chronicled bloody and transformative moments in modern American history.--Eric Arnesen "The Washington Post"
I have not read a book on the history of the African American which I find more informative and enlightening than Simeon Booker's
Shocking the Conscience. It is brilliantly written and will certainly become one of the valuable works in American history.--George W. Haley, former U.S. Ambassador to The Gambia, West Africa
Simeon Booker lived and breathed civil rights and politics. As
Jet magazine's Washington bureau chief, Booker, as he was affectionately known, covered every major political event affecting African Americans. He told our stories to our readers but in his own way--with honesty and humility.--Linda Johnson Rice, chairman, Johnson Publishing Company
Simeon Booker, renowned journalist, tells a riveting firsthand account of the civil rights movement. He vividly recounts the perils and violence he witnessed as civil rights leaders and organizers fought for the right of African Americans to vote and brings back to life the giants of the civil rights era. In the wake of renewed voter suppression efforts and the continued fight for equality,
Shocking the Conscience reminds us of how far we have come and how far we have yet to go. This book is a must-read for our newest generation of leaders.--Congresswoman Barbara Lee
Starting with his fascinating, inside account of the Emmett Till drama, Simeon Booker's
Shocking The Conscience not only spans the civil rights movement, it serves as a testament to his role as a pioneer breaking color barriers in his own profession.--Curtis Wilkie, author of The Fall of the House of Zeus
The black press was always first on the scene during the civil rights movement, and its dean, Simeon Booker, chronicled the battle from the very front lines of the struggle. From covering the Emmett Till murder and subsequent trial to daringly accompanying the Freedom Riders as they challenged the ramparts of segregation, Booker brought the story of the civil rights movement alive on the pages of
Jet and
Ebony magazines. His reporting informed and inspired millions of black readers. Now, in
Shocking the Conscience, Booker's own eyewitness account of those years is told with the verve and passion of a young reporter and the reflective contemplative tones of an older man looking back over a half-century of pioneering journalism. This is a history not to be passed up by anyone wanting to learn the inside story on the critical role the black press played in the nation's most important and enduring fight for equality.--James McGrath Morris, author of Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power and Eye on the Struggle: Ethel Payne's Journey Through the Civil Rights Movement