Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America

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Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America
* Winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction
* Nominated for a 2013 Edgar Award

* Book of the Year (Non-fiction, 2012) The Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor

In 1949, Florida’s orange industry was booming, and citrus barons got rich on the backs of cheap Jim Crow labor. To maintain order and profits, they turned to Willis V. McCall, a violent sheriff who ruled Lake County with murderous resolve. When a white seventeen-year-old Groveland girl cried rape, McCall was fast on the trail of four young blacks who dared to envision a future for themselves beyond the citrus groves. By day’s end, the Ku Klux Klan had rolled into town, burning the homes of blacks to the ground and chasing hundreds into the swamps, hell-bent on lynching the young men who came to be known as “the Groveland Boys.”

And so began the chain of events that would bring Thurgood Marshall, the man known as “Mr. Civil Rights,” and the most important American lawyer of the twentieth century, into the deadly fray. Associates thought it was suicidal for him to wade into the “Florida Terror” at a time when he was irreplaceable to the burgeoning civil rights movement, but the lawyer would not shrink from the fight–not after the Klan had murdered one of Marshall’s NAACP associates involved with the case and Marshall had endured continual threats that he would be next.

Drawing on a wealth of never-before-published material, including the FBI’s unredacted Groveland case files, as well as unprecedented access to the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund files, King shines new light on this remarkable civil rights crusader, setting his rich and driving narrative against the heroic backdrop of a case that U.S. Supreme Court justice Robert Jackson decried as “one of the best examples of one of the worst menaces to American justice.

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82 reviews for Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America

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  1. John P. Craig

    I can say without reservation that the Devil in the Grove truly explained for me what life is like and what it was like for black people in the south. The author conveyed in my mind, the truth and reality that black people faced when it came to justice in the state of Florida. It was so heartbreaking to see and hear how so many black men, innocent black men, had their lives taken from them out of sheer unmitigated hate. I feel that this book is a must read for anyone interested in the civil rights movement or social justice in America. Florida remains unchanged in my mind.

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  2. Amy Samrath

    Although I knew and had long admired Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court justice, I was woefully ignorant of his early years. A towering moral, intellectual force for change, he risked his life in the backwater courts of Lake County Florida to face down authoritarian bigots armed with every entrenched advantage. Everyone in our country should understand the importance and circumstances of the civil rights victories he won. His raw courage, humor and intellect made converts out of some of his most strident opponents, among them prosecutor Jesse Hunter. It’s no small irony that almost 70 years later, as I finished this book, the streets of Ferguson,Missouri are engulfed in racial violence. Progress is torturously slow.

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  3. K. Os.

    Very interesting book

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  4. Alexander Bean

    One of the most righteously enraging books I have ever read. The sheer injustice of the Jim Crow South and its manifold horrors and indignities are mind-boggling to comprehend. King’s book excellently narrates both the deep, abiding desecration of justice on the altar of white supremacy and brutality and the courage and skill by which great people like Thurgood Marshall helped bring Jim Crow to an end. We have a long road to walk, especially since the current President would no doubt be a huge fan of Sheriff McCall, the titular devil in the grove. But it’s also stunning to see what progress has been made.

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  5. JSR35

    This book moved me in a way that only a few books have done. I read this book as a group read with one of my GR groups, and I’m glad I did, as it forced me to read at a slower pace, so that I could process and discuss the emotions that were stirred within me as I read about this tragic tale about the miscarriage of justice in a rape case where the accused were young black men and the alleged victim a white woman in the Jim Crow South. The author did an amazing job of explaining all the factors at play, both social and economic, within both the black and white communities, as well as in the North and South. He also pulls back the curtain on the legend of Thurgood Marshall, “Mr. Civil Rights”, and allows the reader a more intimate view of Thurgood Marshall the man. I highly recommend this book to anyone who believes in the basic tenants of our Constitution that all men are deserving of basic civil rights. The events covered in this book serve as a reminder of the dark consequences of denying anyone those basic rights, but also renews hope in the American ideal that it only takes the resolve and tenacity of one man (or woman) with a clear vision and focus to create change in even the most dire of circumstances.

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  6. Vic

    A compelling, detailed history associated with extreme injustice and violence, offset by courage and carefully applied legal expertise. Crafted and as readable as an excellent novel, this disturbing factual story is both precise and motivating. It filled in my general sadness about conditions in “the South” before and after desegregation. And, it provided me with a real sense of what it was like to be a black attorney or a black defendant in an all white legal system back then. (And, I realize racism is still an ongoing problem.) I also learned, though, why we should all be proud that there are people like Thurgood Marshall, urging us to respect each other because it is the right thing to do. What an excellent book for anyone concerned about human dignity and fairness.

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  7. Randolph Rossi

    This nonfiction book reads like a thriller and is tells of the horrible treatment of African Americans in the post WWII Florida particularly in Lake County. Lynchings have been eradicated but the Police still murder African Americans without facing any substantial punishment. It speaks of the hypocrisy of our country which for African Americans might as well be Nazi Germany.

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  8. Kathleen W.

    One of the best and most informative book I have ever read! It was heartbreaking but also wonderful, in that it made such an impact in our civil rights battle. I am so happy that Florida completely exonerated these men and are now going to erect a historical monument in their honor. It spooks me to travel through these counties that were so cruel to African Americans at that time in our history. I am so sad that this happened!

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  9. Suzon George

    Not only did this book not depress the hell out of me, but I fell in love with Thurgood Marshall as I read it!King presents the material with sensitivity and skill, knowing full well that the horror of this bit of American history is easily overwhelming to modern readers. Every time the emotional drama of The Groveland Boys’ plight becomes too much, King switches the focus back to Thurgood Marshall, the modern-day superhero in a suit. The book is structured to be about Thurgood Marshall, someone we know survives, someone history remembers fondly, someone whose ideals we can all believe in. Because we know that Marshall has a happy ending, we can walk with him through this terrible story. One almost feels like whispering in his ear, “It’s gonna be okay, Thurgood. You’re going to be the chief justice on the US Supreme Court. I know all seems hopeless now, but just keep plugging away.” The book is ultimately comforting because we’ve all had times when all looked hopeless but we just have to keep plugging away.King sucks the reader into the world of Thurgood Marshall and keeps them there.

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  10. RKH

    Tens of millions of Americans lived during the time during which the events in this wonderful book occurred. Most were aware only from a distance.It is inconceivable to the normal mind that these things took place . What might read as fiction to someone born in the last 75 years is in fact part of the recorded history of our country. The importance of memorializing such sordid events reduces the likelihood of reoccurrence and gives perspective to current events. The past is not yet completely in our rear view mirror and the reminders of these no so long ago times unfortunately say that the work of Justice Marshall, so vividly and carefully explained is not yet complete.

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  11. Robert M. Rosen

    This book depicts early- and mid-life case experiences of Thurgood Marshall and also contains many scenes of him traversing and trying cases in the southern states at his peril. The Groveland Boys case is really only one example of “non-justice for blacks” in many criminal cases tried in Florida and other southern states in which Marshall was involved. The book describes several of these cases and also goes into aspects of Marshall’s personal life which provided the impetus for his driven nature. Although the book has a tendency to jump from one situation to another and from one case to another as well, the work is excellently written and is recommended for anyone who wants to see what southern justice was like for the African-American people in the 40’s and 50’s. It certainly deserved to win the Pulitzer Prize.

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  12. Kimmie

    A remarkable story! Not so long ago in America law enforcement was effectively the militant arm of racial hate groups, most notably the KKK. Today with the recent killings of unarmed African Americans at the hands of professional law enforcement personell, this story is more important than ever. Thurgood Marshall will always be best known for “Brown vs Topeka” and being the first of two African Americans to serve on the Supreme Court. This book puts the spotlight on a particulary troubling incident in the Flordia orange groves where four African Americans collide with Southern social morays and the might of racist and muderous sheriff. Entertaining, thought provoking and certainly relevant for us today. This book should be required reading for all of those who want to better understand the dangerous social dynamic between white law enforcement and the minorities it swears to protect..

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  13. sydell stapler

    My dad was born in the state of Florida. He and his 3 brothers left when they turned 18 because the possibility of having any quality of life required a change of venue. Reading this book made me so angry. The injustice was pervasive and just a way of life. I was raised in the north and didn’t know life was so bad down here. And these attrocities were not taught in sçhool. Americas sins are vast and many. Sweeping them under the rug won’t heal these deep wounds.

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  14. Cranky Greg

    I’m an attorney and most would think all attorneys know everything about Supreme Court justices. I remember Thurgood Marshall, and I wasn’t too wild about him while he was on the Supreme Court toward the end of his term because I thought he was just another liberal. Really, all I knew about him was that he was a former civil rights attorney.I just read this book and man have my opinions on Thurgood Marshall have changed! He wasn’t just a civil rights attorney,he was a brave and courageous civil rights attorney who journeyed into the Jim Crow south to represent black defendants accused of crimes. It’s one thing to be a civil rights attorney and it’s another thing to walk the walk.His involvement in the Groveland Boys case and others shows what Thurgood Marshall was made of. I have to admit I am embarrassed I did not Marshall’s past.This book is well written and you will find some heroes here other than Thurgood Marshall, You will also learn about the worst of the worst of humanity, for example Sheriff Willis McCall of Lake County, Florida and Norma Padgett.Once you read this, you will have a much better appreciation for Justice Marshall and his colleagues. These guys were really courageous.

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  15. w228seddy

    I grew up in Clermont, about 5 miles west of Groveland…..during the 60’s. This book captures many of the horror stories I heard in the black community about McCall. For sure, there were many more. Ironically, with all the injustices going on, Clermont sat kinda in the middle of it all. But you’ll notice Clermont is only mentioned a couple times in the book. Almost as though none of that went on in our town. While there was racism in Clermont, nothing to the degree of what went on in surrounding towns. Or at least, not that I could see or now recall. Imagine how desperate and hopeless blacks must have felt living under the threat everyday by the very body that was supposed to protect! I often heard adults commenting about a black guy taken to County jail. Comments like, we’ll never see him again, I hope he makes it out alive, or if he comes out, he’ll never be the same. I greatly appreciate the book and all Mr. King’s research. I had no idea T Marshall spent time in Central Florida. Thank-you Mr. King for such an important book……..unfortunately, it reminded me of a very sad time in Central Florida for african americans.

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  16. LEW

    The book vividly tells the story of a determined and imperfect man willing to sacrifice in order to make a difference during times of Jim Crow. He changed the minds of those initially subscribed to ways of the South at the time and convinced them to become righteous before they met their maker. Unfortunately, the blood of negroes was shed in order to lead to these changes via justice at the Supreme Court level and the cries for social justice.Different style of a read with this book as it has other stories woven into the main story of the Groveland boys. Highly recommended — and should be a classroom assignment in American history.Not surprised Thurgood Marshall became a Supreme Court justice as I lived a majority of this story.

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  17. Shari T

    This is so well researched, and well written, and along with the incredible photos to bring the whole story into 3D, I was mesmerized.I was fortunate that this book was recommended to me, because it’s probably not one I’d have discovered on my own, and I would’ve missed out on an incredible read.I relocated to Lake County from KC in 2001, and in the 20 years I’ve lived here, I’ve heard of the Groveland Four, and thought I knew the horror of the story, but I had no idea of the depth of the horrors until I read them in this book. Though I sorely needed this education, and want to do and be better, I’m not certain I could’ve moved here if I’d known the disgusting history of this place. (But not only limited to this place).Thank you for telling it like it was – I feel shame for this place even thought I wasn’t here, and I am grateful for this story for opening my eyes, and heart, to so much. I would give this book 10 stars if I could!!

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  18. joele1

    Beautifully written description of an era of atrocities that occurred only 60 years ago! Here we learn about an NAACP martyr whose murder preceded by years that of Medger Evers. We learn about Florida’s KKK that was as virulent and violent as any in other Southern states. We see the systematic criminal actions of state justice-system officials sanctioned by industry that ensured punitive restraints to Blacks in a manner analogous to apartheid. You like me before reading this book, may have a benign image of Florida’s racial history. Not as only have my eyes been opened. Now I have renewed, invigorated respect for the courage of Thurgood Marshall and countless other individuals who risked or lost their lives in the cause of equal justice for all.

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  19. scott j basen

    This book should be a part of the curriculum of every high school class on American history. It is a telling statement of America’s not so distant past and is a reminder to all of us.

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  20. Sarita B. Wilson

    This book made me sad, angry, proud and happy. I was saddened to read of the hatred these young men experienced for no other reason than that they happened to be born African-American and at such a tumultuous time in the history of this country. But had they not gone through this, we may not be as far along as a people or as a country. I was angered by those who knew the truth but would not speak up. Pride was inevitable, as Mr Marshall, the LDF, and others worked relentlessly to right the wrongs that they could. I realized, while reading this book, that there are some wrongs that only God can and will right. For that, I am happiest. I am also happy that the last living Groveland young man’s life was not wasted in prison. I would recommend this publication as mandatory high school reading. These young men were teenagers and many of today’s teens have no idea what life was like for that generation. Yet, they experience the same hatred. I think seeing these pictures, hearing their testimonies and observing the obvious racism will change the behavior of some.

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  21. Kenneth Turner

    It was crazy enough learning that Thurgood Marshall came within an inch of being lynched but you will reach a point halfway through this Pulitzer Prize winning work where you’ll be utterly shocked into about twenty OMG’s and WTF’s in a row. I’d just like to add that if you want to have a clue of the vile racism that still exists, just read the one star reviews until you scream.

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  22. teacherusa

    I couldn’t put this book down – impeccably researched, riveting prose. I’m a history teacher and I learned a lot. I have two questions: First, why did Harry T. Moore not show up to his November 9th meeting with Thurgood Marshall? The author gives us the information that Moore uncharacteristically skipped the meeting with no notice and hints that something happened to him the night before, but never conclusively tells us. Second, where/how can I find the plaintiff’s brief that Marshall and his team filed for Brown v. Board of Ed? I can find the opinion easily, but not the plaintiff’s brief, which I would love to read.

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  23. Robin M.

    Many people don’t think of Florida as a traditionally Southern state. They see sunshine, sugary sand and emerald waters and think of vacation and fun. But I grew up in this state and can tell you that Florida has had a horrible history of racism.In this book you get to see the brilliant lawyer, Thurgood Marshall at work on a terrible case of injustice regarding 4 men accused of raping a white girl against the tide of KKK menace and a sheriff and deputy willing to kill rather than admit they were wrong.I have read about Thurgood Marshall’s life but was directed to find this book by a friend who is a lawyer. It’s worth the time to read.

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  24. Scott Schiefelbein

    There are books that just knock you back. The stories are captivating, the writing is excellent, and the author never takes too long a walk to make a short point. In the nonfiction side, some of the more recent examples I’ve been delighted to discover are David Blight’s biography of Frederick Douglass, “Prophet of Freedom,” Richard Rothstein’s analysis of American housing policy, “The Color of Law,” and Rick Atkinson’s WWII trilogy, starting with “An Army at Dawn.”Add Gilbert King’s “Devil in the Grove” to that list.When I lived in the South, I often heard women sniff at another in their social circle, “She has a past.” The details were never discussed, but it was clear from the tone that the “past” involved something unpleasant, immoral, and that could never be washed away.Florida “has a past.” While Florida would love for Americans to think of their state as personified by the House of Mouse in Orlando, or the Caribbean melting pot that is Miami, or Papa Hemingway in Key West, Florida in many respects is the Deep South. And while there are many fine things to be said about the Deep South, the stubborn fact remains that Jim Crow, as practiced in the South, was so ugly as to border upon evil. Florida, for all its charms, has one of the worst lynching records of any state.Gilbert King’s “Devil in the Grove” tells one of the most horrific tales of the Jim Crow South with the story of the Groveland Boys. Four young Black men were accused of raping a young White woman in Groveland, Florida in 1949. Groveland was citrus country, and the growers used Jim Crow to leverage Black labor for maximum profits . . . it was just *this* close to slavery without crossing the bright line for all too many in the area.Sheriff Willis V. McCall ran Lake County, which included Groveland. Essentially “the Law” in Groveland, McCall may embody the stereotype of the KKK lawman more perfectly than any other figure. Under his brand of Southern justice, he condemned the four Black men to death – regardless of the lack of evidence – and was not all that interested in waiting for a jury verdict to execute the defendants. Indeed, not all of the defendants lived to hear their official verdicts rendered (sorry to be coy, I’m trying to avoid spoilers).Enter Thurgood Marshall, the leading civil rights advocate in the country. Working for the NAACP legal defense fund, Marshall had mighty burdens on his shoulders but decided to defend the Groveland boys. Marshall is the Atticus Finch of this story, but the Atticus Finch who also had to fear for his life on more than one occasion.I’ll leave the plot summary now, but in the hands of Gilbert King this story is a true pot-boiler. At several points, the details are so vividly rendered, so cinematic, that I found myself confirming that the book was history, not historical fiction. It’s just too compelling. King is not a flowery writer, but knows how to build a scene.And what a scene this is. This book should be required reading for all Americans. We must confront this ugly side of American history if we are to move forward. I grew up in Western Washington state, and the history of the Deep South was not a priority. This world is not the America I grew up studying, but it is an America that I – and all Americans – need to know.Highest recommendation.

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  25. Classically C.

    I picked up the book after Governor DeSantis’s pardon of the Groveland Four. I don’t know what I expected to find but the book was a page turner. The untold secrets of this story brought feelings of triumph, anger, fear and pride. It read as a biography but novel just the same. I could not help but draw parallels to our modern day racial tensions. I do, however, remain hopeful that a story like this could never repeat itself.I’m glad Walter Irvin was able to see the light of day!

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  26. Bryant

    Florida is changing. The citrus industry is proving prosperous while tourists are starting to take advantage of commercial air fare. On the coast, sun & surf have cemented the view of Florida as a top travel destination while the carefully crafted image of the state is being protected vigorously. The Sunshine State has often been absolved of it’s southern sins because it’s “south of the south.”Unlike it’s neighbors Alabama & Georgia, Florida rich racist history is often overlooked. Gilbert King decided enough is enough. Devil In The Grove brings you inside the stifling and suffocating central Florida court rooms & jail cells where four innocent blacks were paraded in front of KKK loyalists and racist law men after a bogus rape charge send the community of Bay Lake & Groveland into a frenzy. Facts be damned, the town was out for blood and this was the perfect opportunity to “put those uppity n**gers back in their place.”The book moves at a breathless pace and leaves no stone unturned. What makes Devil In The Grove a 5 Star read is the desire to expose the real motives behind each crooked character. You have a community of poor white farmers upset at the influx of confident, post WW2 blacks who want their piece of the American Dream. To think, black men were being lynched while wearing their Army uniforms…shocking. All of this sets the stage for Thurgood Marshall & the NAACP to take a stand against Sheriff McCall and his band of loyalists.If you want a happy ending, don’t read this book. There is no silver lining. There is no light at the end of the tunnel. It’s a must read because the events ARE recent and there is no explanation for the barbaric cruelty on display for nearly 400 pages. Marshall was a brave and righteous man who worked in an inhumane environment. Yet he & his team accomplished so much by focusing on the law & the American constitution. Those little “facts” were often overlooked by the police but the Supreme Court isn’t Central Florida & it’s why Marshall was always appealing the all white jury’s verdict.Must read.

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  27. Stephen J. Whitfield

    Gilbert King deserved the Pulitzer Prize he won for this book — riveting and appalling.

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  28. poliosurvivor

    I found this book very well researched and well written. It’s hard to take years of facts and data and build a story around them without getting dull and tedious. This book brought the characters to life and held my interest. It had a wealth of information that made me appreciate the struggles black people had in the South during the 1950s. I had an Uncle and Aunt who lived in Louisiana during this time and they joined the KKK, looked down on the negro population and seemed oblivious to the harm being suffered by them. My Aunt had a girl come and clean twice a week. They had a car but wouldn’t go pick her up or take her home, instead she had to pay a taxi to get to work. She worked six hours a day twice a week for $10.00 a week. Even then that wasn’t enough to feed her and her child. This book brought all their struggles to life and made me appreciate Thurgood Marshall and his tireless work on the behalf of his people. Without dedicated individuals fighting endlessly for their rights we would still be a bigoted racially divided nation. We’re not home free yet, but we’ve come a long way toward ending racism and it’s just a matter or never going back but inching forward until America is fair and just to all it’s citizens.

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  29. Ken Jones

    Gilbert King has brought to the reader a vivid account of what it was like to live in the south both from the white and black perspective. He is able to present the challenges that faced a young lawyer, Thurgood Marshall, in his search for social justice. Thurgood Marshall brought truth to light even when he didn’t win on the first go around. Thurgood proved that the appeal process was the only way he could get the trial and facts out of the hands of the extreme racist south. The courage it took for him to leave a somewhat safe New York and travel alone to the embittered battlefield of the south is something one can only marvel upon. The extreme views of the majority of whites in the treatment of the “colored” is schocking, and continues to this date. Our country needs more Thurgood Marshall’s. I would recommend this book to be required reading in every school.

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  30. Jeanette Armstrong

    This is a story that goes back to the pre-civil rights era of the early 1950’s. Thurgood Marshall was a young lawyer working for the NAACP. While he lived in New England, most of his cases were in the deep south, and particularly Florida. It recalls all the horrible things that black people endured post civil war until civil rights were established and enforced. You are drawn through all the horror of lynching, race baiting, and discrimination at its worst. You are reminded of a time when blacks could not check into a motel, use a drinking fountain or a restroom unless is was specifically designated for blacks only. Those were horrible times and as a northern white woman I did no know those things existed until my mother and I traveled to the deep south about 1953. We were shocked to see signs that said whites only, or blacks only. We did not know about those things and TV news was in its infancy and the media was not telling us about it. This book will walk you through the heroic efforts of the NAACP and others like Thurgood Marshall in bringing equality to the black population. While it’s often shocking, it is a good read and a walk through some of our more shameful history.

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  31. Virginia Customer

    Read this book. For me, it has been close to a life-changer. Of course I knew something about Thurgood Marshall, but I had no idea of the depth and span of his heroism. His fighting for the rights and lives of African-Americans–fights that spanned decades–is astonishing to read about. And he wasn’t fighting alone. Other lawyers and NAACP officers gave extraordinary service. Harry Moore is one of these, and he and his wife come to a heartbreaking end.Marshall, Moore, and others had terrible fights on their hands. One such case– that of four wrongly accused black youths in central Florida, entailing a trumped-up rape charge, Klan violence, deaths, appeals, and courtroom dramas–is the focus of this book. The brutal, unjust treatment of African-Americans in Florida is a revelation. I have never felt so close to the lives and deaths of blacks as I felt reading King’s detailed accounts. Nor have I ever felt so close to genuine heroism. Marshall didn’t just brilliantly argue points of law; he saved lives.Few people I know had even heard of the book. I am an avid reader, someone who keeps up, and so is my husband. It is only through a book group that I came to read “Devil.” Other members of the goup, save the presenter, had not heard of it either. And it won a Pulitzer just two years ago!! Why hasn’t it received more attention? Perhaps because the examples of whites torturing and murdering blacks in 1950s America is too raw and painful in these days of Ferguson and Charleston–As said, read this book!

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  32. That’s what she said, then….

    If the black community commits half of the violent crime, why would you look for someone else? If the black community is at odds with the police, how do you solve crimes? The story is disturbing. Are we just using the black community for empty political purposes, or are we really trying to solve the problem? (While I am writing this, on TV, a black man is at gunpoint with a Miami Police Officer. He is denying having thrown a man off a bridge, a 30 foot drop. The officer witnessed it. The followup news story is the sentencing of Bill Crosby.)

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  33. Rick Goff

    What an accomplishment this book is. It tells an important story from the Jim Crow South in the manner of a thriller. I read two hours past my bedtime and the first thing I did this morning was to grab it and read the rest. Wow!

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  34. Michael Bittman

    Having moved to Central Florida over 30 years ago, I had heard about past Klan activities but until reading this book had no idea of the hatred and evil perpetrated on black citizens. The theme of institutional racism permeates the book and reminds us to be vigilant of government and other leaders. I know many of the Central Florida communities where these events occurred and will always be mindful of these tragedies and the mindset that allowed injustice to rule. Living in mostly white suburbia can lead to the impression that racism is a thing of the past. But the culture in Central Florida in the late 1940s and early 1950 that permitted these events to occur and go unpunished is not quickly or easily washed away.Great book for Central Floridians of all ages.

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  35. rossofinertia

    While at times the book’s exhaustive detail of the players in the case of the framed Groveland Boys can be a tad repetitive– yes, we understand, Sheriff McCall is a true demon– there is more than enough here to educate and hold the reader in rapt attention. Thurgood Marshall is a true American hero, that is not up for debate. That said, the supporting cast at the NAACP, the ancillary team members defending the Groveland Boys (many of whom were white and Jewish), host of heroic journalists who also risked life and limb to see the truth come to light, and even the few Floridians who were brave enough to change their minds are the real story here.I recommend this book.

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  36. Timothy

    A truly exceptional book! It is one of those books that is so hard to put down until you’ve read it in its entirety. It is one of the best books I’ve read. I would also highly recommend the Silver Gavel Award winning nonfiction book titled “Contempt of Court: The Turn-of-the-Century Lynching That Launched A Hundred Years of Federalism” by Mark Curriden and Leroy Phillips. It is certainly a book that provides “…evidence of horrible things that have occurred in our country’s history…” we must never forget.

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  37. Liz

    If you read this book, you will begin to see racism and heroism embedded in our society. You will see the systemic failure of the justice system— as well as the hard work and personal sacrifices by blacks and whites who are offended by it.The book is written as a page-turner, but it is well-researched and densely informative. Suggestion: Read it through, without long interruptions. There are a lot of real people who play important parts in the court cases, so, if you put the book down for too long, it is hard to sort them all out again and something is lost in the storytelling. This book is too good to let that happen!If I could buy one book for all of my friends, it would be Devil in the Grove.

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  38. Glenn R. Springstead

    This is an account of Thurgood Marshall’s defense of three African American young men charged with raping a white woman in her late teens in Florida in 1949 (a fourth man alleged to have taken part in the rape was shot and killed by law enforcement before reaching trial). It spans the period from the time of the rape to the middle of the 1950’s when Marshall successfully argued on behalf of school desegregation before the U.S. Supreme Court. Marshall’s work in defense of the young men in fact occured more or less simultaneously with his work (along with colleagues of the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund) in the Brown vs. Board of Ed cases. It is thus a remarkable story about a remarkable man who helped change the course of American history in the latter half of the last century.It is also obviously a story of the segregated U.S. South, complete with corrupt law enforcement officials, roving bands of White mobs and the KKK who endeavored not only to keep the races separate in accomodations, but also greatly resisted any advance made by African Americans in the region. Fortunately, Devil in the Grove reveals a few cases of redemption involving White southerners whose minds are changed about the Black defendants through Marshall’s advocacy.Besides Marshall, Devil in the Grove highlights a number of other key individuals such as Franklin Williams and Marshall’s mentor, Charles Houston, all active in the NAACP. Another NAACP leader in Florida, Harry T. Moore and his wife were killed in a bombing of their house during the events relating to the Groveland Boys’ case and their murder has never been officially solved.The narrative itself gets off to a bit of a rough start, at least it seemed to me. The first quarter or third of the book jumps around a lot. The early pages frequently shift years, locations and personalities involved. However, by the book’s second half, the narrative is up and roaring along, telling a story difficult to put down. Overall a great read of an important man and mostly forgotten story that fully warranted the retelling provided here.

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  39. Deb Lindstrom

    I grew up in the northern states of we still call the United States, although lately it seems more and more people born and raised in some other, non-northern areas of this nation are not interested in seeing them remain united. Not as I recall is behind the meaning of “united,” as one would expect it to be used in association with “states,” to define the purpose behind linking those two words to define a nation.When I was in grade school, I saw the Civil Rights Movement and Martin Luther King on local TV news, but could not associate with any of it in my life. In fact, I was going on six years old before seeing an African American person for the first time ever in my whole life.I was curious in a child-like way at the time, but that was about it. I did not attach any feeling to that first encounter, likely because my parents didn’t give me any reason to attach any kind of feeling to their experience of my first encounter with an African American citizen of the United States of America. The encounter would have been the same had that citizen had blue or purple skin. The only thing I took away from that experience was that now I knew people weren’t all practically the same color as I’d thought prior to the experience of learning otherwise.Because I was not raised by biased parents, living in some biased community, when issues about civil rights did enter my world in my grade school years, the events taking place might as well have been occurring on Mars or the Moon; they had little to no importance in my life, as far as I knew at the time. No more importance in my young world of that time than did issues of Women’s Rights. Now the Vietnam conflict at the time, that was different because that issue did have some relevance in my young world because I knew families in my neighborhood who had been negatively impacted by it in their own immediate families.But getting back to the title for this review, I really and truly didn’t know all of this had been occurring in places so familiar to me, like Florida was. Not that I’d ever set foot in Florida; in fact I’d never even been to anywhere further south in this nation than Salina, Kansas to visit relatives maybe two or three times in my life. So, even though I have now had forty-some more years of acquaintance with issues of civil rights as pertains to Americans of varying skin color; such as the fact that somewhere in our more southern states there had been racial strife; there had been instances of lynchings; there had been segregation (I’d never seen any segregation in practice myself), all of these things I’d become aware of still seemed as though they’d been isolated and remote incidents I was simply glad weren’t representative of the United States of America I knew.Boy, was I wrong. I cannot believe.(even though now I do believe) things were ever as bad as what I’ve learned they could be from reading this book. Wow, I truly had no idea. It’s now embarrassing for me to admit the degree of my naietivity, but it’s true. I’m afraid in having read this book, my eyes have been opened to an America I am ashamed of. So ashamed, that if I ever have the chance to again visit Europe, as I had done several times in my early 20’s, I’m not sure would want to tell anyone that I’m an American. Not the way I would have given out that information readily as before anyway.I had already been thinking along those lines due to events occurring at the highest levels of government, such as the those in Congress in the past 3 or 4 years, but adding the knowledge I’ve gained from reading this book almost seals that deal. My feelings of America standing for “Freedom and justice for all,” had been shaken by recent events, but I had been seeing this as like the flu, or a head cold, and America would recover again in time. Or so I thought, until reading this book. Now I’ve been introduced to an entire, long term history of the lack of freedom and justice for all in this nation, and hearing those words about America being all for Freedom and Justice sound more like lip service to me, and not much more.This is one of the best-written book’s I’ve come across in a very long time. The details presented were not boringly dry and non-fictional in any way. Nor were the events described given a kind of sensationalism that makes one wonder if the author was trying to embellish any facts. Riveting from the 1st page and very hard to put down!If you want a REAL history lesson, I highly recommend this book. I will be looking for others by this author. While it troubles me to learn these facts and to know the truth, one cannot move forward in life, sensitive to historical facts without really knowing the truth of this nation, warts, scars, and all. I did myself a favor in buying this book, I think others may come to that conclusion as well, once they’ve experienced this book as I have done.

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  40. Laura Thompson

    I passed my original copy to another reader. It was a book that I wanted on hand. Received in good condition.

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  41. Bill Emblom

    Five stars indicate that I “love” the book. I can’t say that I love it, because it disgusts me to think that “my country tis of thee sweet land of liberty” carries the stigma of such ignoramuses as found in this book. Characters such as Sheriff Willis McCall, jailer Reuben Hatcher, Norma Padgett, and whittlin’ Judge Truman Futch disgrace themselves and the entire country throughout these pages.Narrow-minded bigots feel that Negro veterans from World War II are displaying an “uppity” attitude when they wear their uniforms after returning from service to their country. How dare they have the audacity, the nerve, the gall to even think they are equal to us superior (really ignorant) whites?In 1949 four Negro individuals were wrongly accused of assaulting Norma Padgett, one immediately murdered and the remaining three beaten until they “confessed” to a crime they didn’t commit or even never happened. Southern justice! Thurgood Marshall defended the remaining three, and the details of what took place will, or at least should, simply disgust you.It’s a good thing we no longer behave like this, right? We can rationalize that those bigots back then were victims of their times. We haven’t progressed as much as we’d like to think. We recently witnessed an adult who felt “threatened” chasing down a young boy named Trayvon Martin and shooting him to death. We not only haven’t progressed as much as we’d like to think we have, but we are in danger of reverting back to those blissful Ozzie and Harriet days (for white people). If nothing else this book should raise your blood pressure.

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  42. Alice

    Everyone should read this book. We tend to sweep history under the rug when it does not appeal to us. Thurgood Marshall could have taken the easy way out. He had a Law Degree he was as they say he was High Yellow, a good looking man, had a wonderful wife and buy all accounts could hav stayed up North and made a good living. Instead he fought for Civil Liberties. Knowing along some white folks we trying to kill him, he never gave up the fight. He walked into those Southern Court Room knowing full well his clients was never going to receive fair trial. That did not deter him. He continued to fight for Justice. What a wonderful story. I plan to buy another book about The Great Thurgood Marshall.How lucky American and the Justice system was when he was appointment a Supreme Court Justice. Keep a box of tissures handy because the truth can break your heart and tears appear out of nowhere as a result of the horrible injustice that black people had to indure.I highly recommend this book.

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  43. J. Martin

    A very well written account about the truly appalling injustices inflicted upon innocent victims of southern Justice. False accusations of rape landed many black men in the electric chair. This story centers on a particular incident in central Florida and a corrupt Sheriff named McCall that frames four young black men for rape. It is also an account of the role that Thurgood Marshall played in defending the accused. Torture, beatings, falsified evidence and false testimony are all used to convict three of the four accused. One is murdered by a posse before he is even arrested. Two more are shot by the Sheriff on a dark road while being transported for retrial. One survives but the courts and legal authorities refuse to indict the Sheriff since the entire legal system is corrupt. The legal authorities and the KKK are one in the same during this dark period of American history. This book is a real eye opener…

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  44. Fast Eddy

    This was an enlightening read about a very brave and great American civil rights leader who became the first African-American justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. A very well written page turner that illustrates how brave the early civil rights leaders were in America who risked and often lost their lives in their struggle to overcome the ugly legacy of slavery and racial bigotry in America. An excellent companion book would be “Just Mercy” by Bryan Stevenson (see my review) which illustrates how the poor and people of color to this day seldom receive equal justice under the law in the United States. The struggle for racial equality in America continues. The struggle continues, but “Oh, deep in my heart, I do believe,We shall overcome someday.” Do yourself a favor. Read this book.

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  45. kennethrobison

    This presentation is somewhat difficult to follow simply because so many characters are integral to this story.On the other hand, it was wonderful to be reminded of the many, many people who participated in this struggle.

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  46. Mark B. Carter

    Reminded me of the shear heroism of Thurgood Marshall and others during the early to mid 1900s. Reads like a novel, but a great history lesson

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  47. marguerite

    This book was such an eye-opener. I didn’t even realize that there was a civil rights movement in the 1940’s. The book is about a black lawyer, Thurgood Marshall, who, working with the NAACP, traveled the south defending black people who had been accused of heinous crimes of which they were innocent. The flavor of the book can be gotten from something in the prologue: Mr. Marshall is speaking (this is a paraphrase) and says, “It wasn’t seeing the body hanging from the tree that caused me so much horror. It was the little children, dressed in their Sunday best, who had been brought to stand around the body for a photograph.”Also, having grown up in the South the book gave me pause about my own thinking. I personally never saw any overt cruelty handed out to black people, but I did see the black water fountains along side the white ones and the bathrooms marked “colored.” I was a child at the time and I thought nothing about it. It just was the way things were. As an adult, I realize just how demeaning and dehumanizing such symbols are. The movie, “The Help” really slammed that one home.Another good book on the same subject is “Blood Done Sign my Name.”

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  48. Deviled Egg

    How powerless must African Americans have felt in the Jim Crow 1940s and 50s? How racist and corrupt was the era and the place (Florida farm country)? Who was willing and able to help, and by helping the downtrodden people of that state, help us all? This factual account is both terrible and remarkable; terrible in the way that society conspired to keep blacks in “their place” and remarkable that Thurgood Marshall and many others were able to fight the necessary fight to bring change. As a white northerner, a male, I learned a lot that my education hadn’t taught me.

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  49. Amalie

    This is a riveting book, reads like fiction but a is a well-written documentary of the racism and the KKK that existed in Central Florida…a shameful period in our state’s history especially in the 1940s and 1950s, that stillexists today, .

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  50. MaxLaw843

    This is a Pulitizer Prize winning book about 4 innocent black youths wrongly accused of having raped a white, married 18 year old girl. It highlights the work of Thurgood Marshall, later to be a renowned Justice of the United States Supreme Court, in his fight for the “Groveland Boys” and some of his other desegregation legal work. Quite worth your time, money, and education.

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  51. Hot Rod

    So many truths intersect in this powerful book. Thurgood Marshall was a tremendous lawyer and human being. To think of NAACP lawyers putting their lives on the line in attempts to level the legal playing field for Blacks and poor who defenselessly faced a sadistic and for corrupt criminal justice system.

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  52. Kevin J. Ashley

    In the first chapter I thought, “This isn’t that well written and particulars of the case are pretty bland and this is going to just be a tribute to Thurgood Marshall.” But with each succeeding chapter I was more spellbound than with a Stephen King novel. Each event just gets more and more convoluted and disgusting. And the worst part of this is that it is all true. I always thought that caricatures of good ol’ boy sheriffs from the South were funny and potentially a bit unfair. But reading the actual events described in this book make me understand that who we were as America at that time was every bit as bad as what the rest of the world said about us. By the way, before anyone writes a review saying that this never happened – I challenge them to actually read the book first.

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  53. caraffels

    This book should be required reading for all. It is masterfully written like a mystery novel.King writes about an evil time and many evil people. It is almost hard to believe and stomach that such horrible things took place in the United States.Thurgood Marshall was a brave, courageous man. The indignities he suffered and the danger he endured were remarkable and yet he was focus and deliberate in what he wanted to achieve. And achieve he did.Marshall is mostly known for his fight for educational equality and as the first black Supreme Court Justice. This book gives great insight into Marshall’s less publicized work in criminal cases.When I read books like these it always makes me wonder if the people who acted so poorly had (or have) any regrets over their behavior. Are they ashamed or embarrassed when they look back on their life? What about their descendants? Do they know? Are they ashamed of their parents or grandparent? Or do they rationalize it as OK somehow.King does have some feed back regarding this (in the paperback version – 2 letters) but unfortunately not from the key players.

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  54. Missthegoodstuff

    An absolute necessary read in an unfortunately still flawed country. Stunning story that still obviously resonates garnering a well deserved Pulitzer.

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  55. Brian V. Hunt

    This phenomenally-detailed, well-researched, and fast-paced work was a pleasure to read…except for the horrifying tale it tells. It is extremely well written and illuminates the culture of terrorism inflicted upon African Americans during Jim Crow. How men and women like Marshall and his team found the courage to persist under the prolonged threat of death and the frustration of Jim Crow justice is a mystery and an example to be greatly admired.Everyone should read this book.

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  56. Too many toys

    While the author soft-pedaled Marshall’s womanizing, he noted it and generally took a balanced approach. I learned a lot about Marshall and an aspect of the civil rights movement of which I was not aware. As a relatively new Floridian, this also illuminates some not so proud FL history.

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  57. RJW

    Having lived in Florida during the 1960’s, it is easy to envision the environment in which the lack of humanity and fairness flourished, even at the highest levels of government. It undoubtedly was much worse in prior decades. The description of Sheriff McCall and his thug deputies, and their reign of terror, is so real. That he continued to get re-elected by Lake County citizens is shameful. My parents retired to Lake County in the 1980’s. Much seemed to have changed for the better, or I hope it was so – I had long left Florida. You can’t avoid being moved by this book.

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  58. Gary and Darlene Stockman

    Though the book reads like a well written novel, the message is anything but fictitious. King lays bare the barbarous, repulsive political and social regime of Lake County, Florida in the postwar, pre-civil rights era as exemplified in the Groveland rape case that callously, if methodically, claimed the lives of two innocent young black men. The author vividly and meticulously details the hatred, domination and exploitation of blacks by whites in this “south of the South” rural Florida county in the late 1940’s and 50’s. The events surrounding the rape case were so egregious to those outside of Florida that it became nationally known and catalyzed the nascent civil rights movement. The book is a salient reminder of just how deep racial bigotry runs in our society. In fact, the recent Trayvon Martin/George Zimmerman case is eerily reminiscent of the Groveland case, not in terms of specifics, but in that it serves as a reminder to all of us to be on constant guard lest our unconscious predilections for like-group identity influence our behavior at the expense of unlike individuals or groups.

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  59. SC

    I will never see Florida in the same way. Do yourself the favor of reading this book. The details are well written, the story unfolds in a way that will keep the pages turning. Good balance of detail between all people while are presented as characters in the book. Also puts Marshall in a new, broader and well deserved context. Worth the read.

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  60. upstate york stater

    An example of mans inhumanity to other human beingsbased on historical information and presented as a best selling work of fiction might be presented. The. Acceptance of the Deep South justice system that prevailed in central Florida is rather unbelievable but examples of the bias that permitted it to exist can still be found throughout the country today.It’s exposure of a little of Thurgood MARSHALL’s life is probably in itself worth the read but the book itself is exploring only the tip of the ice berg as to what life was like for the colors and poor whites in the South long after the Civil War. It certainly makes one think and hope that although we are now living in a time where greed has developed a caste System here in the United States sheriffs such as sheriff McCall are now just a part of history and not still making history.

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  61. H. Catherine Dillon

    I taught in Groveland, FL in 1970s and as a 23 year old from Indiana, I knew nothing about this case. Ignorance is not an excuse and after reading this book I understood the world I was teaching in and the events of the time. The powerful sheriff, all white all male school board , the company store and much, much more. There are things I would have done differently. This is a powerful telling of Tavares County power structure, the history of racism at its worse and life in central Florida. It is not an easy read but a book I value.

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  62. Dienne

    I don’t often use the phrase “tour de force”, but if it isn’t applicable to this book, I don’t know when it would be. Gilbert King has delivered a solid, in depth, thoroughly researched tome on not only one of the most brutal (although, sadly, little known) civil rights cases in American history, but also a thorough survey on the state of race relations in the American South in the late 1940s and early 1950s. For anyone who has ever wondered exactly what the “Southern Way of Life” is, you need look no further than this hate-fueled tale of widespread murder and mayhem.In a surprisingly slim, albeit dense, 360 pages (of text, plus notes, etc.), King manages to paint a rich, detailed, sickening and enraging picture of Southern “justice” in the Sunshine State. The unsupported word of a white woman (girl, really, whom few really believe) and that of her drunken on-again, off-again husband launch a series of events that leave two young black men dead – one hunted like a dog, the other shot in cold blood – along with two more wrongfully jailed, one on death row. Along the way we witness the racial intimidation and violence of the KKK, the death by firebombing of civil rights leader Harry T. Moore, and the slow turning of the wheels of justice in the nation’s highest court. Also along the way we meet the prosecutor, Jesse Hunter, who comes to believe in the innocence of the “Groveland Boys”, yet who prosecutes them anyway; the born and bred Southern journalist Mabel Norris Reese whose slow change of heart gets her labeled a “pinko”; and the Southern sheriff in charge of it all, Willis McCall.But most of all we meet the men who stood up and dared to fight back, sacrificing family, health and safety to do so – Charles Hamilton Houston, Franklin Williams, and main character future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Gilbert does not shy away from these men’s faults; they had their fair share of internal squabbles and personality conflicts, and Marshall at least was a hard-drinker who wasn’t exactly faithful in marriage. Nevertheless, despite not being saints, these men put it all on the line and they, among many other civil rights crusaders, deserve the lion’s share of the credit for the advances in justice and equality. As head of the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund, Marshall was involved in many facets of civil rights law, from criminal cases involving wrongfully accused blacks to segregation cases at schools and universities, to his most famous case (or, really, collection of cases), Brown v. the Board of Education. But the Groveland case, little know though it is, ,was probably Marshall’s most formative case, and the one he took most personally.If you like epic tales of good vs. evil, this is your book. If you like edge of your seat thrillers, this is your book. If you like stories with genuine, three-dimensional characters, this is your book. (Note: I would say “believable characters”, but Sheriff McCall, his henchmen and supporters are so wildly extreme that, were they characters in a fiction book, they would be deemed unbelievable.) You will bite your fingernails to the nub worrying for the Groveland Boys and cheering for Marshall, his team of lawyers and other sympathizers as they risk their lives in the hostile territory south of the South. You’ll witness false accusations, evidence tampering, forced confessions, threats of and actual violence, jury stacking, witness tampering, and nearly every form of legal malpractice in the single-minded goal of protecting the “Flower of Southern Womanhood” and securing “justice” against the “perpetrators”. But be warned, if you like nice, tidy, happily-ever-after good-defeats-evil stories, this is not your book. This is a tale of senseless violence and oppression. The story of the deaths of three innocent black youths in the prime of their otherwise promising lives. It’s the story of the deaths of a civil rights leader and his wife, and the violence and intimidation against countless others. It’s the story of the Teflon sheriff who ruled Lake County for another twenty years, despite countless other accusations of misconduct and corruption.But this isn’t even just the story of the “Groveland Boys” case. It is the story of the world’s emerging superpower, the beacon of justice and democracy to the world, and how that superpower turned a blind eye to the injustices routinely inflicted on black citizens throughout the Jim Crow South. In addition the Groveland case, Gilbert King recounts dozens of similar and related cases from all over the South. From race riots to lynchings to rape to discrimination of all types, King puts the lie to the oft-repeated protest of the South that it was Northern/NAACP/communist/etc. agitators who stirred up otherwise peaceful Southern race relations. And no, things weren’t always rosy in the North either, but Marshall and his colleagues didn’t fear for their lives, and when black butler Joseph Spell was accused of raping his white employer, he received a fair trial and was acquitted in Connecticut, something that could not and did not happen below the Mason-Dixon line.If you need a silver lining to an otherwise very dark cloud, it comes from the fact that the very barbarity of this and similar cases paved the way for justice to slowly trickle in. There is, perhaps, a limit to the inhumanity that human nature will bear, and as publicity of these kinds of cases grew, so too did public outrage. Like Mabel Norris Reese, Americans North and South began rethinking their deeply held beliefs regarding race and race relations. At the same time, the diligent and careful legal work of people like Houston and Marshall began setting enough precedents that by 1954 cases like Brown v. the Board of Education could overturn the legal framework supporting Jim Crow. These changes came too late to save Ernest Thomas, Samuel Shepherd and Walter Irvin (and to save co-defendant Charles Greenlee from an undeserved stint at hard labor), but they came in time to see Thurgood Marshall promoted to the highest court in the land, where he presided over an unparalleled period of civil rights growth in the nation’s history.This book should be required reading for high school and college students, as well as adults. Now that we have our first black president, there are those who would whitewash the struggles it took to get here and deny that there is much left to improve. Power of the kind wielded by Sheriff Willis McCall and supported by like-minded people as well as decent but unthinking people doesn’t cede easily and, when forced out, it looks for ways to turn public opinion back to itself and restore itself to its “rightful” place. It is important that all Americans know the truth about where the struggle began and how much it has cost to right the wrongs of the past I order that we not fall prey to the same mindset that caused such oppressive division in the first place. Gilbert King has done us a great service by providing this rich and detailed history of one of the darkest chapters in our history so that this “post-racial” world can learn from history and not repeat it.

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  63. H. Anderson

    Fantastic, one of the best books I have ever read. First, it gives tremendous insight to the man, Thurgood Marshall, and his values and genius. Secondly, as a native Floridian who has lived and practiced law in central Florida for over 45 years, I was aware of the events which and characters who are the subjects of this book. Willis McCall was still sheriff and Troy Hall was still a judge when I began practicing in this area. Segregation was still alive and well in Lake County. The water fountains and restrooms were still labeled for blacks and whites. This was NOT for purposes of “historical preservation”, THEY MEANT IT. Amazingly, another of the Circuit Judges had a photo of a public lynching hanging on the wall in his chambers for all to see. This remained present for years after the time covered in this novel. This novel covers central Florida from the 40’s through the 70’s. On the surface was blatant racism, segregation, bigotry, and injustice. Beneath the surface were very powerful individual and corporate interests, especially those related to the citrus industry. Were we seeing simply ugly racism or was there something more sinister going on that in a different form continues to this very day? Were segregation, public lynchings, bombings, and beatings being used to control a supply of cheap labor for grove barons or was it simply racism? And what about the brutal and infamous racist Sheriff Willis McCall? The summer of 1949 – 4 young black men were accused of raping a young white woman in Groveland, Florida. Most likely no rape ever occurred. McCall turned a mob loose on one of the accused who they killed. The remaining three after being severely beaten were convicted in a sham trial. One of the accused was sentenced to life in prison. His conviction was not appealed for tactical reasons. The remaining two had their convictions reversed by the U.S. Supreme Court. As Sheriff McCall was transporting them back to face a new trial, both handcuffed prisoners were shot by Sheriff McCall. Was he the Devil in the Woods or was the Devil more abstract such as prejudice, racism, poverty, ignorance, etc? As one reads the book it is easy to be caught up in the horrific and unbelievable events being described, but one should try to think beneath the surface of what else is occurring and why. This novel includes bigger than life individuals: Thurgood Marshall, J. Edgar Hoover, Florida politicians and governors, Presidents, Sheriff McCall, etc. It also includes a family most have never heard of, Harry T. and Harriette Moore. Harry Moore and his wife, Harriette, were activist and civil rights pioneer members of the NAACP in Florida. He and his family resided in Mims, Florida which is east of Orlando near what is now the Kennedy Space Center. On their 25th wedding anniversary, Christmas eve, December 25, 1951, he and his wife became the first civil rights leaders in America to be assassinated when 4 members of the KKK bombed their home. Harry Moore had days earlier called for an indictment against Sheriff McCall and asked Governor Fuller Warren [a KKK member] to suspend him from office. Was there any rape, what happened to each of the Groveland 4, was anyone ever held accountable for the torture of the accused, was Sheriff McCall ever held accountable for shooting two handcuffed prisoners, was anyone convicted of killing the Moores? To learn the answers just start the book you won’t be able to put down. Significant material is present in this book even after the novel is ended. Of note is a letter from the daughter of a very prominent and ethical Ocala attorney, Pat Pattillo. One of the citrus barons referred to in the novel was her great grandfather. She gives a vivid first hand account of the change in values of some within a region as well as her perceptions from childhood to womanhood.

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  64. William C. Robinson

    As the right win presses law to limit what is taught, the truth cannot be hidden…this book shows how a movement of people lead the NAACP to help fight the indignities of racism and discrimination. No we dont want to read about it becuase it is quite ugly, but we cannot ignore our history we must know it to avoid repeating it..??

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  65. Nancy McClendon

    As a white suburban woman that never lived in the South, and an admirer of Marshall, I was enthralled with the way this terrible story unfolded. The history, the abuse of people based on their color was told so movingly, plainly, and in a way I couldn’t turn away from. I admired the NAACP attorneys who knew where they could and couldn’t effect change. The way their lives were on the line really all the time and that they took it as part of their obligation and mission to get this country to come to change was riveting. I wish I could continue to write my reasons for thinking this book was a good read, but I’m rendered speechless. This book should be a part of required reading in schools. This is a story to be heard.

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  66. C. R. price

    Wonderful writing, impeccable research, about a repugnant real-life Florida sheriff who, in lockstep with the KKK, waged a decades-long war on the Black residents of his citrus growing county with near total impugnity. Thurgood Marshall (who went on to be our first Black Supreme Court justice) risked his life among murderous racists in Lake County and surrounding areas, and with his dedicated colleagues, crafted a strategy for the defense. He wears the real white hat in this excellent accounting of the personalities and events of one horrifying incident among uncountable others, the repercussions of it, and the national legislative tableau unfolding at the time. Gilbert King elaborates the brilliant strategic work by the young lawyer Marshall and his colleagues in the NAACP, in laying a progressive trail of legislative precedents, leading to hard-won civil rights, integration of schools and daily life, helping lift the country out of the morass of Jim Crow era repression of America’s Black citizens. King weaves a seamless story of ugly Southern racial politics and prejudice, and steadfast, courageous determination, helping us see how far we have come and much farther we have to go.

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  67. cnk

    I didn’t realize how sick some people’s minds can be. I couldn’t put the book down. I knew thing s were bad then, but didn’t realize how bad. This book makes one realize the importance and fortitude of Mr Marshall and his colleagues.

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  68. Marva J Franklin

    Studying anti racism in church and community.a lot of unknowns were revealed.

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  69. R. Jean

    Fans of Thurgood Marshall and fans of non-fiction will both appreciate this story. The author does a superb job filling in details that set the mood for the entire case. The details are succinct and easy to follow. It will surely be a book that I recommend and share over and over again. I look forward to reading more from Gilbert King!

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  70. RWW

    This is a richly researched, yet a page-turner of a book that documents the rampant, violent racism in the state of Florida in mid 20th century. The degree to which law enforcement, economic interests and the KKK combined to intimidate and all but enslave the black population was shocking, especially since we don’t usually think of Florida when we think of the violent responses to the Civil Rights Movement. Since the book centers on the many, well-drawn characters surrounding a particular case in a particular town we are engrossed in a crime and courtroom drama.The reader is also introduced to the brave and brilliant Thurgood Marshall and the other leaders of the early civil rights legal team. The more you know about Marshall the more impressed you are!

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  71. V. Schmidt

    Well I was a 7-yr-old floridian when the alleged rape occurred and 9 in 1951 when the murder of one and attempted murder of another of the two accused boys created such a stir. These are not events that a little white girl would have known anything about … but there would have been plenty opportunity to be taught about it by the time I got to high school, but still nobody who could have mentioned it ever did. There was no internet then and I think it’s a very good thing that these kinds of things are less likely to go hidden for very long any more. The truth will out, especially the more people there are who don’t want it to.I’ve been trying to learn more about what happened to the people involved beyond that. According to Wikipedia, Moore’s daughter Evangeline became a civil rights activist herself and passed away in 2015. Walter Irvin apparently died in 1967 or 69. BUT WHAT I WANT TO KNOW is whatever happened to Norma Padgett – she was 17 in 1949, 10 years older than myself, so she might very well still be alive and well somewhere. She started the whole Groveland tragedy and, it seems, has just slipped through the cracks of history. If she was never called upon to answer for her actions, I would really really love to find out if she at least ever had regrets. Mr. King, can you shed any light on Norma???

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  72. Poopsiedear

    Thurgood Marshall. This lawyer of the NAACP who fought for justice for blacks when blacks were persecuted for the color of their skin. This is the tragic story of 4 blacks accused of raping a white woman and the tragic true happenings of the aftermath.Did the Groveland four do this act, were they wrongly accused and confessed under duress.This book shows the brutality and hatred in the South in Texas when the KKK still roamed and they prevailed.I recommend this book and could not put it down.

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  73. Karen Roberts

    This is an excellent history of the Groveland case in central Florida in the late 1940s and early 1950s, as well as a history of the NAACP, and Thurgood Marshall, who became a Supreme Court Justice. The story revolves around a case of rape declared by a young white woman in the town of Groveland, in Lake County Florida. The accused were 4 black men. This was the “lynching” south, Jim Crow at its worst. “Colored” men were routinely beaten into confessing to crimes they were innocent of. Many did not live to see a courthouse, as they were lynched by a mob when sheriffs looked the other way when these angry mobs showed up at the jail. If they did make it to trial, the deck was stacked against them, with the “confession”, a jury of their peers, consisting of all white folks who believed in their guilt before the first gavel was heard, and a Capitol punishment system that meted out “justice” with the death penalty for raping and killing, as well as talking to a white woman or disagreeing with a boss. It has been estimated that a black person was lynched every 4 days for a period spanning 60 years!This story reveals corrupt law enforcement, particularly the bigoted sheriff of Lake County, Willis McCall, who oversaw the “confessions” by beating, faked crime scenes, and even murdered suspects in cold blood. Some parts of this story are so painful to read I had to put the book down for a day just to process the corruption and hatred.The fight for justice proceeded, led by the NAACP, despite risk to their own lives. The attorneys and black journalists were sometimes chased out of town by cars filled with KKK, and Thurgood Marshall came very close to losing his life after one court appearance in Florida.The author also covers the slow fight for justice that overturned the “separate but equal ” doctrine established in Plessy vs Ferguson that led to Brown vs Board of Education, which saw the beginning of the end of segregation.These are violent battles, where many lost their lives, and this history should be knowledge we all have as we navigate this country which still has pockets of hatred and bigotry abounding. The author has done a very good job of bringing this story to light, with a work the has the property of a thriller, and the broad reach of history that informs our lives today.I feel this is a must read, despite my feeling shame at having to acknowledge this brutal history as my country at its worst, but nonetheless, my country. I am also left with pride, that when cooler heads are allowed to prevail, “the arc of history does swing towards justice”!

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  74. JTMat

    This book reads more like a Southern Gothic novel than the meticulously researched history of a tragedy that it is. The author brings the post-war South to life in a way that is engrossing, suspenseful, horrifying, and inspiring. He deftly moves from dark roads in secluded forests to bright streets in New York, from sweltering Southern courthouses to the powerful chamber of the Supreme Court, from evil backrooms to inspirational rallies. The powerful storytelling belies the reality of the events that are carefully noted and documented bringing greater impact to a small town event that shook the world.I was in high school when first learned about Thurgood Marshall. By this time, he was a portly, elderly Justice of the Supreme Court. Despite later learning about his work on Brown, I have always had a hard time shaking my first impression of him as an unhealthy looking man who I first saw only as a token. Thanks to this book, that image is forever gone. In its place is the striking figure of a young, dynamic, intelligent, and attractive firebrand who worked tirelessly to change the world and make it better for all of us. Many civic rights leaders have greater recognition today than Marshall, but I now shudder to think of what the world might have been like without him.One of the great values of this book is the way it makes a horrifying, almost unbelievable event American history readable and accessible. The author manages to be fair to the people of that time and place without demonizing them, yet he refuses to allow the reader to overlook the evil and terror of that dark period that, in many ways, still exists today. He also elevates that power of the heroes who took part in that history and implies that change in the world will only come from us as individuals, much as it did from them. This is not just a great book because it brings to light a terrible piece of our history, but it does so in such a way that inspires us to continuing wanting to make a difference.

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  75. mark l. silverman md

    This book hits the reader in the face with an awful side of our country’s history. The events taking place in the shadow of the European holocaust do not differ so much in their nature. The evil of racial prejudice taps into a place in the human spirit that is abhorrent to any that believe in the sanctity of life. Thankfully, there are men and women of character who strive to rid us of this terrible blot. This volume should be “must reading” for our children, so that they may be aware of Man’s potential for doing evil and attempting to cloak it in law. We must be vigilant to safeguard those who may be considered “different.” The “Devil in the Grove” helps us to know how people of character and convictions make a difference.

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  76. Lorri Ventura

    Gripping, shocking account of racism, and a powerful depiction of young Thurgood Marshall as a civil rights attorney. My book club chose this book as one of our reads during Black History Month but it’s a must-read for all Americans, at any time of the year.

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  77. Zelmo

    I have lived 30 miles from Groveland and built many houses in Lake County for the past 40 years without a word about “The Groveland Boys” Wow!!

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  78. Jillayne Hollifield

    Chilling but real. I now live very near to the area in Florida where much of this took place and just thinking about it makes me sick. This is an excellent book but altogether too many of us tend to see this as way in the past. We white people do not want to take responsibility for what we have done in the not too distant past. No wonder black athletes are taking a knee at NFL games! Face up to it, white folks. This is your daddy and your granddaddy, and your great-granddaddy, and so on.

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  79. Denise Deisher Winarchick

    This book opened my eyes to more abuse that BlackAmericans have had to deal with. Reading through tears, but then turning to anger. What these fine and upstanding people had and still have to endure at the hands of bigots and racists. I just do not understand.

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  80. SPS

    I have always worked and taught about discrimination and have watch changes in our society and how long the struggle has taken and continues. What was enlightening about the book was all the detail about the efforts that were not as commonly heard about during the early civil rights movement. It is amazing what people can do to one another with a smug justification that they are bigger and better-not at all true–just the opposite. Our “leaders” today need to take a big lesson from Justice Marshall and the NAACP lawyers who believed in this important cause so much that they risked their lives to fight for the equality that is so necessary. I am saddened that we don’t have these kinds of risk takers and activists today to take on the many causes that our country needs. Efforts today are thwarted by big super pacs who prefer that we lose the gains we have made.

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  81. Susan M

    It was a great historical piece of Marshall at the NASCP well before he becomes a Supreme Court Justice. The few cases if covers really delves into the racism this country (mostly the south) perpetrated on Blace Americans. Very shameful. A very necessary narrative. Helped me on my quest to learn more about the horrible way white america treated black america.

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  82. C. Elliott

    This is a must-read book on 20th century American history and the rise of the civil rights movement. It’s also a testament to how far there is to go to reach equality in this country. This book serves as a great eye-opener for those of us who did not live through segregation. The book is written so that it transports in frightening detail the horrors of black life in the Deep South. I think it should be required reading for all younger generations so they don’t forget why legislation for equality is paramount to our success as an entire nation.

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    Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America
    Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America

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