<p>A new Georgia was about to be born. This is a most interesting account of the pangs of its birth.</p>
<p>A very useful and illustrative book, both in terms of what it reveals about political conditions in Georgia in the wake of World War II and of the perspective of southern liberal thought in that era.</p>
author of <i>The Most Southern Place on Earth</i>
<p>After reading this book, who could ever forget the voices of this colorful cast of scoundrels, cynics, and occasional heroes? . . . Anyone interested in the early stages of the civil rights movement—and in the ambivalent white response—will find <i>Who Runs Georgia?</i> essential reading.</p>
from the foreword
<p>This book reveals a great deal about the nature of southern liberalism in the 1940s. It is interesting and well written.</p>
author of <i>The Creation of Modern Georgia</i>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Calvin Kytle (Author)
CALVIN KYTLE (1920-2008) was a writer, editor, and publisher whose work appeared in Harper's, the New York Times Book Review, and Saturday Review. He lived in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
James A. Mackay (Author)
JAMES A. MACKAY (1919-2004) served six terms in the Georgia legislature and one term in the U.S. Congress. After retiring from his law practice, he lived in Rising Fawn, Georgia.