
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 9 reviews on

*The book that inspired the 2021 PBS American Experience documentary, The Blinding of Isaac Woodard.*
How the blinding of Sergeant Isaac Woodard changed the course of America's civil rights history.
Richard Gergel is a United States district judge who presides in the same courthouse in Charleston, South Carolina, where Judge J. Waties Waring once served. A native of Columbia, South Carolina, Judge Gergel earned undergraduate and law degrees from Duke University.
With his wife, Dr. Belinda Gergel, he is the author of In Pursuit of the Tree of Life: A History of the Early Jews of Columbia, South Carolina."Richard Gergel presents a deeply researched account of [Isaac] Woodard's tragic story and weaves it into a larger narrative . . . The definitive account of Woodard's blinding." --Kenneth W. Mack, The Washington Post
"Remarkable . . . riveting . . . a revealing window into both the hideous racial violence and humiliation of segregation . . . and the heroic origin of the legal crusade to destroy Jim Crow . . . an engrossing history . . . The great value of Unexampled Courage is that it might garner a broad audience for the kinds of heroism involved in this history of litigation." --David W. Blight, The New York Times Book Review "Gergel's hallmark is an emphasis on how people at every level contribute to the making of history...He makes that point memorably in Unexampled Courage. Hopefully it will nurture the ground from which will arise more effective efforts in our own time to confront the ongoing menace of racially motivated police violence." --Randall Kennedy, The American Prospect "Packed with overlooked history . . . Gergel recounts [the story of Sergeant Woodward] with compelling prose, revealing how a single injustice led to some of the nation's most important civil rights victories." --Eric Deggans, NPR "A fascinating historical and legal investigation . . . Gergel reintroduces oft-forgotten civil rights heroes in this captivating, deeply researched work that is likely to draw in general readers, historians, and legal scholars alike." --Karl Helicher, Library Journal