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Autobiography & Biography
To the Mountaintop
To the Mountaintop |
| Ebook - Autobiography & Biography | |
| Sunday, 25 June 2006 | |
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Page 1 of 2 To the MountaintopMartin Luther King Jr.'s Sacred Mission to Save America: 1955-1968 by Stewart Burns
Harper Collins (March 2004)
More than a biography, To the Mountaintop is the history of a
turbulent epoch that changed the course of American and world history.
Moral warrior and nonviolent apostle; man of God rocked by fury, fear,
and guilt; rational thinker driven by emotional and spiritual truth --
Martin Luther King Jr. struggled to reconcile these divisions in his
soul. Here is an intimate narrative of his intellectual and spiritual
journey from cautious liberal, to reluctant radical, to righteous
revolutionary. Nobel Prize Download (Excerpt, Pdf, 587KB) About Martin Luther King Jr. Stewart Burns draws not only on King's speeches, letters, writings, and well-reported strategizing and activities, but also on previously underutilized oral histories of key meetings and events, which present a dramatic account of King and the movement in the crucial years from 1955 to 1968. In a striking departure from earlier books on Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement, Burns focuses on King's biblical faith and spiritual vision as fundamental to his political leadership and shows how these threads wove together a "single garment of destiny," making King the most important social prophet of the twentieth century. King is not portrayed as a lone exalted hero, but as the heart of a fabric of principled leadership that stretched from his closest colleagues to the movement's foot soldiers on the streets. This book stresses his shaping by other leaders -- heroic figures such as Bayard Rustin, Ella Baker, James Bevel, Bob Moses, and Marian Wright Edelman -- and his conflicted relationships with John and Robert Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
To the Mountaintop is uniquely powerful in presenting actual
conversations between King and others, and in showing how King's public
words often revealed his private torment. Burns provides a uniquely
realist portrait of King and the civil rights movement by revealing the
vital but neglected religious character of the story, and by
demonstrating how King profoundly experienced the movement as a sacred
mission following a path of liberation and sacrifice pioneered by Moses
and Jesus.
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