“Tyson has written, with compelling prose and great insight, an excellent biography as well as a definitive history of armed self-defense doctrines in the civil rights movement. He has produced a fascinating book that is a welcome antidote to the historical pap being spooned out in popular documentaries these days.”—Journal of Southern History
“Tyson’s firecracker text crackles with brilliant and lasting images of black life in the Carolinas and across the South in the 40s, 50s and 60s. Liberally peppered with quotes from Williams . . . the book is imbued with the man’s voice and his indefatigable spirit. . . . Tyson successfully portrays Williams as a troubled visionary, a strong, stubborn and imperfect man, one who greatly influenced what became the Black Power Movement and its young leaders.”—Publishers Weekly
“An important study of a forgotten Civil Rights leader. . . . [A] groundbreaking, skillfully written revisionist monograph (the first full-length study of Williams ever published).”—Library Journal
“Meticulously researched. . . . [and] magisterially argued.”—Journal of American History
“A sympathetic, absorbing portrait of one of the most influential and controversial African-American leaders of the twentieth century. . . . A remarkable, often harrowing, account of the civil rights movement and some of the people that made it possible. . . . A book that powerfully conveys the life and voice of one of the key personalities of the modern civil rights struggle.”—American Historical Review
“This book couldn’t be more timely because it challenges the effort of many white Americans to sanitize, deny and distort the past, often in the name of heritage.”—News & Observer
“Tyson’s main achievement, in addition to conquering the problem academics have in writing readable prose, is to put Williams’s Black Power ideology and actions into the larger context of the era — the Cold War, the nonviolent civil struggle, and the questions of gender and sexuality in racial politics. This is an interesting book about a captivating personality during a fascinating time of recent history.”—Detroit Free Press
“Fills a void in the history of the civil rights struggle and provocatively details an evolution of armed black nationalism during the 50s that was overshadowed by the nonviolent movement associated with Martin Luther King. . . . Contain[s] a great deal of intriguing and revelatory information that makes it a worthy read.”—Charlotte Observer
“A stunning new biography. . . . Written in lucid and confident prose with a solid reliance on first-hand accounts, Radio Free Dixie presents an engaging portrait of one man’s continuous struggle to resist political and social oppression.”—Emerge
“An excellent book. . . . Timothy Tyson has done Williams, and scholars of 20th century world radicalisms, a great service with Radio Free Dixie. . . . Definitive in its coverage of Williams’s life between his birth in North Carolina in 1925 and his exile to Cuba in 1961.”—Against The Current