A Story of Patriotism, the Vietnam War, and the Fight to Save America's Soul

Matthew F. Delmont
Viking Press

For Black Americans, the Vietnam War forced a generation to question what it truly meant to fight for justice.

Civil rights historian Matthew F. Delmont weaves together the stories of two Black heroes of the Vietnam War era: Coretta Scott King, who bravely championed the antiwar cause—and eventually persuaded her husband to do the same—and Dwight “Skip” Johnson, a Medal of Honor recipient whose life ended tragically after returning from battle to his native Detroit. Together, these extraordinary accounts expose the contradictions of Black activism and military service during the Vietnam War.

Through rich storytelling, Delmont offers a portrait of this period unlike any other, shedding light on a fractured civil rights movement, a generation of veterans failed by the country they served, and the valor of Black servicemen and peace advocates in the midst of it all.

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Brother Outsider, Brother Insider: A Political Biography of Lawrence Guyot Jr.