"Like a Google Earth zoom-in, Lucas Burke and Judson Jeffries make us first see the wide historical context of the struggle to reshape social, political, cultural, racial, and even spatial relations in one American city and then experience the personal, breathing realities of that struggle. What gives the book its profound power and lasting relevance is its marvelous research, most especially its troves of interviews across a wide range of participants in the struggle. Readers will gain a valuable new understanding of what the Black Panther Party meant to a city far away from the San Francisco Bay Area and New York City, and activists will get priceless lessons in the dos and don’ts of local organizing."
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H. Bruce Franklin, author of Vietnam and America
"The Portland Black Panthers is a significant, indeed important, book eminently deserving a place in modern civil rights bibliography. First, it adds a chapter to what we know of the national (urban) impact of the Panthers; second, it locates black militancy in white Arcadia, as it were, and exposes the ubiquity of race-driven policies miles away from the benighted South or the septic ghettos of the big industrial centers of the North; third, it describes the agency possessed by a Panther cadre adroit at confrontation and prudent in compromise (part of Albina survived); and finally, this book may make us reflect on the reasons for so many Ferguson alternatives to Albina."
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David Levering Lewis, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of W. E. B. Du Bois: The Fight for Equality and the American Century, 1919-1963
"With meticulous research, Burke and Jeffries restore voice and agency to activists and community leaders whose importance has faded from the popular narrative of oh-so-cool Portland. They remind us that the city has shared the troubled history of other American communities and highlight the initiative of individuals who battled its ingrained and sometimes unconscious racial inequities. The decade from the mid-1960s to mid-1970s was one of fundamental transformation in Portland, and the Black Panthers and their allies are an essential part of that story."
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Carl Abbott, author of The Metropolitan Frontier: Cities in the Modern American West
"In this new work from one of the sharpest and most prolific scholars of 'the Long Civil Rights Movement' around, Judson L. Jeffries teams up with a young scholar in Lucas N. N. Burke and together they provide us with the kind of formidable assessment of the Black Panther Party that is seldom seen. The Portland Black Panthers fulfills two critical needs: it extends the reach of our knowledge of black communities in the U.S., taking us far west as Toni Morrison does with Home, to give us a wider lens for viewing the black experience. And, wonderfully, this also provides an additional piece that fills in almost mosaic-like the full picture of the extent and function of the Black Panther Party as a political movement."
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Carole Boyce Davies, author of Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones
"This book is a breath of fresh air in Oregon history and also a major contribution to black history and black radicalism, drawing our gaze away from charismatic national leaders to the unheralded foot soldiers who confronted great obstacles and formed creative alliances to serve Portland's most vulnerable residents."
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David Peterson del Mar, author of Oregon's Promise: An Interpretive History
"Lucas Burke and Judson Jeffries have crafted a captivating study of a local and largely unknown chapter of the Black Panther Party. By skillfully interpreting the inner workings of Portland’s branch, with a sympathetic yet questioning stance, they do the important work of moving us beyond the spectacular to show how the practices of the everyday matter."
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Diane C. Fujino, author of Samurai among the Panthers: Richard Aoki on Race, Resistance, and a Paradoxical Life