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Vernon Burton, Professor History, Sociology, and Computer Science, Clemson University
"Kristina Anne Durocher presents readers a new, provocative look at the life, career, and legacy of Ida B. Wells, the fearless social justice crusader known to some as "the Princess of the Press" and a "Modern Joan of Arc." Durocher's comprehensive account provides rich context to the nuanced narrative of Wells's life story, drawing on a wide array of primary and secondary sources. The volume offers a fresh, upbeat interpretation of Wells-Barnett's career in Chicago, which had previously been characterized in defeatist terms, and encourages an academic intervention in restoring Wells's legacy, one that was tarnished by the conflicts of her time. Durocher's account accurately characterizes the life of Wells as one that "illuminates issues of race, gender, class, religion, politics, region, and reform ... is interwoven into the history of the United States as it confronted the challenges of a modern world," and offers a new lens for understanding one of the most complicated, dynamic figures to bridge the last two centuries. Bravo!"
Amber Roessner, Associate Professor of History, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.