"A terse account of King's life and legacy, which provides a lucid, nuanced account of the man and his times for readers put off by 1,000-page epics. Drawing on the research of scholars such as Branch and Garrow, Sitkoff sets King's public virtues—his genius for oratory and mass motivation, his often canny political sense—against personal vices well known and less so—his womanizing, his sometime prevarication as a leader. In so doing, Sitkoff provides a vivid portrait that deserves to be widely read, not only as the standard short King biography but also as an incisive essay on his significance today. Foregrounding King's primary vocation as a Christian and a preacher, Sitkoff traces the development of King's moral philosophy: from his birth into Atlanta's God-fearing black bourgeoisie, where he was early implanted with the sense of 'somebodyness' that he fought later to instill in others; through his decision to study for the pulpit ('My father is a preacher, my grandfather was a preacher, my great-grandfather was a preacher,' he'd say, later adding, 'so I didn't have much choice.'); to his discovery of the social gospel that would form the core of his faith. . . . Sitkoff tells this story deftly . . . King's greatness, as Sitkoff's fine book eloquently affirms, lay in the dedicated talent with which he pursued ideals that no earthly country has yet obtained. That he at times framed his appeal in the words of the U.S. Constitution is testament to the principles put down there. But it is his moral conscience—antithetical to jingoism and transcendent of any one nation's aims—for which King most deserves to be celebrated today. 'Injustice anywhere,' he warned time and again before he was slain in April 1968, 'is a threat to justice everywhere.' This dictum, like the man who uttered it, still resounds."—
Joshua Jelly-Schapiro, San Francisco Chronicle
"A succinct and highly readable re-examination of King's life."—
Michael Taylor, The Times-Dispatch (Richmond)
“Writing with skill and imagination, Sitkoff reminds the reader that the central value for which King lived and died was his idea of community . . .
King is clearly the best short biography we have of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Its lucid and accessible style makes this text appealing far beyond a limited community of experts. It’s a must-read for all who have an interest in King’s life and legacy.”—
Noel Leo Erskine, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Determined to broaden the lens through which people—and tomorrow's history—view the man, Sitkoff wrote King: Pilgrimage to the Mountaintop. The book's driven by the often uncelebrated, radical side of King, and it stressed King's dream has yet to be fully realized. It doesn't only focus on King's successes, but also his failures, both personally and as a leader. Over 234 pages, the book takes readers from King's birth in his parent's home in Georgia on Jan. 15, 1928, to his role in the desegregation movement and to his assassination—40 years ago today—on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, outside room 306, in Memphis . . . Sitkoff, who began writing the Pilgrimage about five years ago, agreed the presidential nomination battle between Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton poses an interesting backdrop for his book . . . Drawn from four decades of teaching King, his personal connections to the man and a plethora of scholarly material, the work has been praised for its accessibility."—Adam D. Krauss, Foster's Daily Democrat
"A marvelous read and striking achievement! This engrossing and perceptive biography offers a balanced yet critical analysis of both Martin Luther King Jr. and his epochal times in their full complexity."—Waldo Martin, U.C. Berkeley, author of No Coward Soldiers: Black Cultural Politics in Postwar America
"In this richly accessible and commanding study, Harvard Sitkoff provides a timely reminder of the enduring significance of Martin Luther King's spiritual strivings and quest for social justice. A welcome contribution to the King canon, King: Pilgrimage to the Mountaintop brims with insights into the African American most emblematic of the modern Civil Rights Movement."—Darlene Clark Hine, Northwestern University
"Drawing on his expertise in the history of the civil rights movement, Harvard Sitkoff has produced the finest brief biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. The man who emerges is not the homogenized King celebrated every January, but a radical critic of military adventurism and economic and racial injustice, who speaks to the present as powerfully as to his own time."—Eric Foner, Columbia University
"King is a perfect combination of au