07/26/2021
CNN political commentator Boykin (Sex, Lies, and Denial in Black America) delivers an accessible breakdown of how systemic racism has contributed to today’s political dysfunction. Contending that “the problem of racism in American politics transcends specific political parties and leaders,” Boykin examines pre–Civil War compromises made to “prioritize peace between the states over justice for Black people,” and describes white Northerners’ rush to reconcile with the South after the war. By the late 1960s, Boykin argues, the Republican Party had planted its seeds “deep in the poisonous soil of white racial resentment,” using tough-on-crime policies to appeal to white voters’ “sense of racial superiority” and to stoke anger over Black advancement. Boykin also describes Bill Clinton’s initiatives on racial issues as “more symbolic than substantive,” argues that Barack Obama did not center Black concerns as much as Republicans feared he might, and casts Donald Trump’s election as the “logical extension” of America’s long history of “half-measures, symbolism, and cyclical moments of feigned reconciliation.” Though many of Boykin’s arguments are familiar, he has a firm grasp of U.S. history and enriches the narrative with reflections on his experiences as a gay Black man in American politics. The result is a persuasive diagnosis of America’s social and political ills. Agent: Jane Dystel, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Sept.)
In Race Against Time: The Politics of a Darkening America, Keith Boykin provides us with the insights of someone who is an eyewitness to history. This is history we have made together and lessons Boykin recommends to help shape the future.”—Donna Brazile, former chair of the Democratic National Committee
“In evocative fashion, and through the depth of his personal experiences at the highest levels of American politics, Keith Boykin traces the parameters of America’s ‘never-ending civil war,’ from the shock of Clinton’s Black-voter-driven presidency though Bush and Obama and the white nationalist nightmare of Donald Trump. Race Against Time is essential reading at a calamitous time.”—Joy Reid, host of MSNBC’s The ReidOut
“With clear insights and provocative analysis, Keith Boykin showcases why he is one of the country’s foremost experts on race and politics in America. This book is timely, relevant, and important.”—Leah Wright Rigueur, associate research professor at Johns Hopkins University
“Race Against Time is Keith Boykin’s best book yet in a long list of books and anthologies that have helped define what cultural criticism is. This book is also an account of what it means to be overlooked in a capitalist landscape that denies the existence and contribution of black queer citizens. What floors me is that Boykin’s genius—from all the political and racial history from Reconstruction onward, to his well-wrought recounting of the antics of US presidents from Reagan to Trump—still allows him to remain a man of hope and a writer that affirms the spirit in essays that speak to us as a comforting brother would.” —Jericho Brown, author of The Tadition
“A provocative and compulsively readable guide to racial politics in the Black Lives Matter era, Race Against Time is the right book at the right time. We would ignore Boykin’s searing analysis and urgent solutions at our peril.”—Paul Butler, MSNBC legal analyst and author of Chokehold: Policing Black Men
"Boykin (Sex, Lies, and Denial in Black America) delivers an accessible breakdown of how systemic racism has contributed to today’s political dysfunction...he has a firm grasp of U.S. history and enriches the narrative with reflections on his experiences as a gay Black man in American politics. The result is a persuasive diagnosis of America’s social and political ills."—Publishers Weekly
“Drawing on both legal scholarship and his own experiences, Boykin argues that the fear of a darkening America has a deep-rooted history, and outlines how this fear transpired the rhetoric and policies of all political parties… Readers interested in American politics and the role of racism in U.S. history should pick up this insightful and alarming book to better understand how America’s political system perpetuates racial injustice.”—Booklist
"Peep the bold title of Boykin’s new book — Race Against Time: The Politics of a Darkening America — the title says it all. The book doesn’t shy away from the statistical, in-your-face-facts, that America is changing in a way that’s making a lot of people uncomfortable about who they are…a deeply troubling and deliberately provocative book. He understands that we must raise essential questions about our path forward.”—Los Angeles Sentinel
“Keith Boykin is one of the preeminent political pundits of our time, having devoted decades of his life to the preservation of American democracy, including from inside the Clinton administration. From that vantage point, Boykin has been in a unique position to witness firsthand the long game being played by the GOP, as well as what is at stake if Black Americans do not take their elected leaders to task. In this historical chronicle of the political response to an increasingly diverse America, the bestselling author calls his readers to action, as well.”—theGrio, “15 Black histories to read beyond Black History Month”
★ 09/01/2021
In his latest book, CNN political commentator and best-selling author Boykin (One More River To Cross) examines the history of 20th-century American political parties and the pivotal role of Black Americans in relation to each party. This provocative chronicle of race relations and political maneuvering is divided into three sections that offer an incisive look at the county's present, past, and future. Beginning with the economic and political chaos of 2020 and ending on a hopeful note, Boykin peels away the layers of partisan alliances and hypocrisies. The book's strongest section looks at the history of slavery and race relations in concert with the pivotal role of the Black vote during the late 20th century. Boykin does not hold back in his critique of the modern Democrat and Republican parties and provides astute insight on the white politicians' record of systemic racism. However, he does have a cautious yet positive outlook about the impact of modern political protests, especially after the murders of Trayvon Martin and George Floyd. VERDICT A must-read for anyone interested in the history of American politics and race, and a call-to-action for aspiring activists.—Leah Huey, Dekalb P.L., IL
2021-06-29
Prominent journalist and author Boykin, co-founder of the National Black Justice Coalition, looks deeply into our dangerous era and the unraveling social order by which Whites feel threatened by Black progress.
Four “cataclysmic crises” have faced America in the recent past: the pandemic, the ensuing economic shutdown, the emergence of a formidable racial justice movement, and the crisis of democracy produced by the Trump administration and its retrograde supporters. All four crises came together, Boykin writes in a spot-on analysis, in the murder of George Floyd, who was found by autopsy to have been infected with Covid-19, had been laid off when the restaurant in which he worked closed, and was inarguably a victim of a racist regime led by a president motivated by “a repudiation and attempted erasure of the nation’s first Black president.” Floyd’s death, writes the author, “would provide the pretext for the president to instigate a new crisis of democracy,” one that led to widespread efforts on the part of the police to suppress dissent—at least on the left, since no such effort was made to suppress the disaffected Whites who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump was despicable, but Bill Clinton, in some ways his moral opposite and in others a kindred spirit, wasn’t much of a prize, either. In Boykin’s view, his assault on the rapper Sister Souljah was unquestionably racist. “For the vast majority of Black people at the time, Clinton…was the best we thought we could do under the circumstances,” he writes. “Reexamining the Clinton administration some decades later, it seems we were wrong.” What remains to be done, Boykin suggests, is to surmount the four crises and force White constituencies at last to recognize that “ignoring the pleas of Black and brown voices” is a threat to the social structure that can no longer be tolerated.
A troubling, provocative book that raises essential questions about our path forward.