
"This book is a much-needed additive to the already-extant literature on the Mississippi civil rights movement, not only for its artful prose, but also because it sets a high standard for future researchers, pushing scholars to expand their source base and periodization. Hamlin's book should be widely read." -- The Historian
"Crossroads at Clarksdale offers an important understanding of the strengths and limitations of the black freedom movement." -- American Historical Review
"A beautifully written book, strong in its ability to capture the different organizing strategies pursued in one community. . . . A major contribution to civil rights historiography." -- Journal of American History
"Adds much to the story of civil rights in Clarksdale and beyond . . . [and] provides an incredibly rich account of race, class, gender, generational, and organizational tensions within the civil rights movement." -- Journal of Southern History
"A must read text for courses on US history, but also may interest general audiences." -- History: Reviews of New Books
"Exhaustively researched, this book richly details the black struggle for freedom in the Mississippi Delta. . . . Recommended. All academic levels/libraries." -- CHOICE
"An impressive, well-written account of the black freedom struggle in Clarksdale, Mississippi. Françoise Hamlin's oral history interviews are terrific, her analysis is thorough, and the story she tells is dramatic." -- John Dittmer, author of Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi
"A sweeping, moving, and pathbreaking history of a half century of civil rights activism in Clarksdale, Mississippi. Françoise Hamlin gracefully runs an integrated gender, class, generational, and race analysis throughout the book to permanently shift and transform our understanding of the black freedom struggle. Crossroads at Clarksdale jumps off the page." -- Annelise Orleck, Dartmouth College
"Truly valuable work. This book is as important a contribution to understanding Mississippi's freedom struggle and to bringing attention to many aspects of the movement as any I know." -- Charles E. Cobb Jr., originator of the Freedom Schools as a SNCC field secretary, founding member of the National Association of Black Journalists and author of On the Road to Freedom: A Guided Tour of the Civil Rights Trail