
Pulitzer Prize-winning chronicle of Thurgood Marshall's dangerous fight for justice in Jim Crow Florida. Thomas Friedman called it "a must-read, cannot-put-down history." Uncovers FBI files even defense counsel Jack Greenberg never knew existed. How far would you go for justice?
通过作者的声音感受这本书
将知识转化为引人入胜、富含实例的见解
快速捕捉核心观点,高效学习
以有趣互动的方式享受这本书
Picture a train cutting through the American South in 1949, its segregated cars carrying a Black attorney toward almost certain danger. Thurgood Marshall pressed his face against the Jim Crow coach window, watching legal protections evaporate with each passing mile. By the time he reached Lake County, Florida, his Harvard law degree meant nothing against the machinery of white supremacy. What awaited him there would become his most perilous case-one so dangerous that even J. Edgar Hoover assigned FBI protection, one that would claim six lives before it ended. The case began when seventeen-year-old Norma Lee Padgett accused four young Black men of rape, igniting a firestorm that brought National Guard troops to Florida's citrus country. Marshall's mission was clear but terrifying: defend the Groveland Boys in a place where the Ku Klux Klan and local law enforcement were often the same people. This wasn't just another case. It was a test of whether justice could survive in a system designed to destroy it. Marshall had survived too many close calls to feel safe anywhere south of the Mason-Dixon line. In 1946, after winning a case in Tennessee, local police stopped his car on a dark road and arrested him on false drunk driving charges. They drove him toward Duck River-a dumping ground for lynched bodies. Only his colleague's quick thinking, defying police orders to follow them, prevented Marshall's murder that night. These weren't abstract threats. Outside NAACP headquarters in New York, a black flag flew whenever a lynching occurred, bearing white letters: "A Man Was Lynched Yesterday." Marshall carried mental photographs of victims like Rubin Stacy, whose corpse was surrounded by smiling white children dressed for Sunday-a grotesque family outing that epitomized Southern brutality's casual nature.
将《Devil in the Grove》的核心观点拆解为易于理解的要点,了解创新团队如何创造、协作和成长。
将《Devil in the Grove》提炼为快速记忆要点,突出坦诚、团队合作和创造力的关键原则。

通过生动的故事体验《Devil in the Grove》,将创新经验转化为令人难忘且可应用的精彩时刻。
随心提问,选择声音,共同创造真正与你产生共鸣的见解。

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