"1963 was really the year that changed things," says Byron Williams, the author of 1963: The Year of Hope & Hostility. Several books discuss the events that Williams, a regular contributor to The Huffington Post, explores in his book, but none have viewed them through the lens of a 365-day odyssey that chronicles this watershed moment in American history and culture. None have focused with laser-like precision on the major events of that year. In 1963, Williams, the pastor of the Resurrection Community Church in Berkley, California, examines America as it was fifty years ago and its impact on America today.
Williams explores 1963 through the prism of the three most influential individuals of that year: President John F. Kennedy, Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., and Governor George Wallace.
It was the year that Martin Luther King wrote his famous Letter from Birmingham Jail. It was the year that King gave the keynote address at the March on Washington.
It was the year that Medgar Evers was killed and four young African-American girls were killed at the Sixteenth Baptist Church. It was the year that Governor George Wallace infamously proclaimed "Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever" and stood in front of the classroom doors of the University of Alabama and endeavored to block two African-American students from admittance.
It was the year that ended with the tragic assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. The dream that was Camelot was drowned in the blood shed that tragic day in Dallas.
In this penetrating and provocative history of this critical year, Byron Williams examines three key moments: the dramatic events of the Kennedy administration, George Wallace's rise to power, and Martin Luther King's rise to prominence as he forged the civil-rights movement into an unstoppable force in American politics and culture.
Williams explores the significance of the events of 1963 and the impact they have had right down to the present day, including:
1963 is forever associated with the assassination of President Kennedy. Yet, says Byron Williams, many other monumental events also occurred that year that continue to have a profound impact on not only American history but also the daily lives of Americans and especially America's commitment to our stated democratic principles and beliefs.
In this groundbreaking historical look at 1963, Byron Williams also investigates how the transformative events of 1963 were dependent upon actions in previous years and were sometimes decades in the making. As Martin Luther King shared with civil rights leader Jack O'Dell, the facts alone do not reveal truth. Instead, it is within the interrelated nature of facts where truth most often emerges. The events that Williams has judiciously selected from 1963, though they have been presented for fifty years as unrelated, are a collection of interrelated facts that tell a profound truth about America then, paving a methodical trail that leads to America now.
About the Author
Byron Williams is the pastor of the Resurrection Community Church in Berkley, CA and a columnist for The Huffington Post and the Bay Area News Group (where his work was considered for a Pulitzer Prize). He is also the author of Strip Mall Patriotism: Moral Reflections on the Iraq War. He has written for The Atlanta Journal Constitution, The San Francisco Chronicle, Tikkun, Christianity Today, and The Guardian (UK). He has also appeared on CNN, ABC, MSNBC, NPR and Fox.
Contact Info:
Book reviewers / bloggers, journalists, and other media professionals wanting to review the book or interview the author should contact GK Zachary at Pro Book Marketing.
Videos