You Can't Kill a Man Because of the Books He Reads

Angelo Herndon's Fight for Free Speech

4 February 2025

Territory Rights — Worldwide.

Brad Snyder (Author)

Description

The story of a young, Black Communist Party organiser wrongly convicted of attempting to incite insurrection and the landmark case that made him a civil rights hero

Decades before the impeachment of an American president for a similar offence, Angelo Herndon was charged under Georgia law with “attempting to incite insurrection”—a crime punishable by death. In 1932, the eighteen-year-old Black Communist Party organiser was arrested and had his room illegally searched and his radical literature seized. Charged under an old slave insurrection statute, Herndon was convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to eighteen to twenty years on a chain gang. You Can’t Kill a Man Because of the Books He Reads chronicles Herndon’s five-year quest for freedom during a time when Blacks, white liberals and the radical left joined forces to define the nation’s commitment to civil rights and civil liberties.

Herndon’s champions included the young, Black Harvard Law School–educated attorney Benjamin J. Davis Jr.; the future historian C. Vann Woodward, who joined the interracial Herndon defence committee; the white-shoe New York lawyer Whitney North Seymour, who argued Herndon’s appeals; and literary friends Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes and Richard Wright. With their support, Herndon won his freedom and reinvented himself as a Harlem literary star until a dramatic fall from grace.

A legal odyssey of Herndon’s narrow escape from certain death because of his unpopular political beliefs, You Can’t Kill a Man Because of the Books He Reads explores Herndon’s journey from Alabama coal miner to Communist Party organiser to Harlem hero and beyond. Brad Snyder tells the stories of the diverse coalition of people who rallied to his cause and who twice appealed his case to the U.S. Supreme Court. They forced the Court to recognise free speech and peaceable assembly as essential rights in a democracy—a landmark decision in 1930s America as well as today.

Reviews

"Angelo Herndon had been a Communist Party organizer for barely two years when the Atlanta police arrested him for attempting to incite an insurrection. In his careful, compelling new book, Brad Snyder recreates the extraordinary struggle to save Herndon from life on a Jim Crow chain gang for daring to promote ideas the authorities didn’t want to hear. A story of fundamental principles and unlikely heroes, expertly told." — Kevin Boyle, author of Arc of Justice: A Saga of Race, Civil Rights, and Murder in the Jazz Age

"Some works of history are top-down. Some bottom-up. You Can’t Kill a Man Because of the Books He Reads is both. Brad Snyder moves gracefully from the streets of 1930s Atlanta, where Angelo Herndon, a young Black radical, was charged with insurrection, all the way to the chambers of the U.S. Supreme Court. This is a hard and hopeful story. Snyder tells it with energy, economy, wide-ranging empathy, and quiet passion." — James Goodman, author of Stories of Scottsboro

"A gripping story of how democracy triumphed under the most challenging circumstances. A timely book and a great read." — Patricia Sullivan, author of Justice Rising: Robert Kennedy’s America in Black and White

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Hardback

9781324036548

152 x 229 mm • 336 pages

£29.99

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9781324036555

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