The New York Times Book Review - Thomas Meaney
Nicholas Buccola's The Fire Is Upon Us is both a dual biography of Buckley and Baldwin and an acute commentary on a great intellectual prizefight…It is tempting to view the Baldwin-Buckley debate as a small victory for the idea of racial equality: Baldwin carried the floor vote 544 to 164. But part of the wisdom of The Fire Is Upon Us is that it leaves the import of the evening open to question.
From the Publisher
"Winner of the Frances Fuller Victor Award for General Nonfiction, Oregon Book Awards"
"Shortlisted for the Ralph Waldo Emerson Award, Phi Beta Kappa Society"
Shortlisted for the MAAH Stone Book Award, Museum of African American History
One of Whoopi Goldberg's Favorite Things, ABC The View
New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice
Chicago Tribune writer John Warner's Book That Will Help You Better Understand the Messed-Up Nature of the World
One of The Undefeated's 25 Can't Miss Books of 2019
One of The Progressive's Favorite Books of 2019
One of LitHub's 50 Favorite Books of the Year
One of Inside Higher Ed's Books to Give the Educator in Your Life for the Holidays
Foreword Reviews
"Nicholas Buccola's The Fire Is upon Us is a riveting, expansive companion text to a historic debate that swept the nation. . . . Following the men's journeys with meticulous detail, Buccola's biographical/historical/political hybrid proffers valuable insights for the current day."
New York Times Book Review
"A gripping snapshot of a country riven by injustice yet anxious about radical change."
Kirkus Reviews
2019-06-30
A study of two acclaimed American thinkers on opposite sides of the political spectrum that underscores the enormous race and class divisions in 1960s America, many of which still exist today.
Buccola (Political Science/Linfield Coll.; The Political Thought of Frederick Douglass, 2012, etc.) grounds this engaging comparison between James Baldwin, "second in international prominence only to Martin Luther King Jr. as the voice of the black freedom struggle," and prominent conservative William F. Buckley in a debate between the two held at the Cambridge Union on Feb. 18, 1965. Taking up the agreed-upon topic of "The American Dream is at the expense of the American Negro," Baldwin addressed the packed audience "in the position of a kind of Jeremiah" (as a child, he was steeped in biblical teachings from the pulpits of Harlem storefront churches). He poured forth the litany of demoralization that African Americans suffer under white supremacy. It was a powerful, moving speech, and Buckley countered it by scolding Baldwin for "flogging ‘our civilization' " and appealing to the audience on the importance of keeping "the rule of law" and "faith of our fathers." By a 3-1 margin, the youthful audience favored Baldwin's speech. Yet Buccola builds his well-rendered narrative by offering alternating looks at how the two American intellectuals and writers developed their arguments up to that point. Indeed, both were deeply imprinted by their different upbringings. Throughout his entire life, Baldwin wrote about the Harlem "ghetto" of economic distress and the "moral lives of those trapped within [it]." Buckley, who hailed from a wealthy Connecticut family and attended a prep school and Yale, where he was a member of Skull and Bones, stuck to the dogma, inherited from his father, of "devout Catholicism, antidemocratic individualism, hostility to collectivism in economics, and a strong devotion to hierarchy—including racial hierarchy—in the social sphere."
An elucidating work that makes effective use of comparison and contrast.