Peter S. Canellos is an award-winning writer and former Editorial Page Editor of The Boston Globe and Executive Editor of Politico. He is the editor of the New York Times bestseller, Last Lion: The Fall and Rise of Ted Kennedy.
Named one of the Best Nonfiction Books of the Year by
Publishers Weekly
"Solidly accessible and thoroughly researched, it makes a
persuasive case for Harlan’s significance and sometimes reads like
a mystery." — The New York Times
"[A] superb biography...Canellos writes with fluency, sensitivity
and clarity about complex legal arguments....June is the
traditional month for major supreme court decisions. One hopes for
the moral courage, clarity of thought and practical vision of John
Marshall Harlan." — Guardian
"One of the most captivating judicial biographies I have read. This
is partially due to Canellos' skill as a writer. He displays the
journalist's ability to identify and capture a good story, and the
talent to turn a phrase. But the thing that makes this book
exceptional is how Canellos turns the subject of John Marshall
Harlan into a poignant story of time and place in American
history.” — The Journal of Supreme Court History
"If the power of one’s dissents are the measure of a justice’s
greatness, then John Marshall Harlan, who served on the court
between 1877 and 1911, deserves a much bigger tribute...[A]
sympathetic and well-written new biography." — Christian Science
Monitor
"Written in lively prose and enriched with colorful character
sketches and a firm command of the legal issues involved, this is a
masterful introduction to two fascinating figures in American
history. " — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"The riveting story of a courageous Kentucky lawyer who initiated
significant challenges to anti–civil rights measures during an era
of ubiquitous bigotry... An impressive work of deep research that
moves smoothly along biographical as well as legal lines." — Kirkus
Review (starred review)
"A meticulously researched and acutely analytical biography...
Canellos offers a nuanced portrait." —Booklist
"The Great Dissenter is a magnificent biography of the righteous
legal trailblazer John Marshall Harlan. Drawing upon a
wealth of archival and published sources, deep-diving
into the American horror-show of systemic racism, Canellos
showcases Harlan as the rare Supreme Court Justice fighting
for a more equitable economic system and civil rights for all
people. Highly recommended!" — Douglas Brinkley is
the Katherine Tsanoff Brown Chair in Humanities and
Professor of History at Rice University and New York Times
bestselling author of Cronkite and American Moonshot
"What a spectacular achievement! Canellos has single handedly
resurrected the memory of a largely forgotten American hero.
Far ahead of his time, Justice Harlan denounced corporate power and
passionately defended the rights of labor, immigrants and African
Americans. On the Supreme Court he was a bold and lonely
dissenter, but as this book shows, history vindicates him and
awards him a place of high honor in the pantheon of American
freedom fighters." — Stephen Kinzer, bestselling author of The
Brothers and The True Flag
“Peter Canellos has vividly brought to life an absolutely
fascinating story that I’m embarrassed I didn’t know: A man raised
in a slave-owning family who became one of the greatest champions
of civil rights in the history of the Supreme Court, his
lone-dissenter opinions cited decades after his death. John
Marshall Harlan needs to be added to our pantheon of American
heroes.” — Adam Hochschild, bestselling author of King Leopold’s
Ghost and Bury the Chains
"John Marshall Harlan is one of the most fascinating and important
figures of modern America, and this book does him justice.
Carefully researched, and rewarding even informed readers with rich
insight into Harlan’s life and work, The Great Dissenter is a
must-read, both for students of the Supreme Court, and for those
concerned about the past, present, and future of racial equality in
the United States.” — Gabriel J. Chin, Martin Luther King Jr.
Professor of Law, University of California, Davis
"Peter Canellos is a brilliant researcher and writer who takes us
on an enlightening tour through history made new in retrospect. His
focus on Justice John Harlan’s African-American half-brother Robert
Harlan, a former slave whose storied career, financial success, and
political and race activism were truly remarkable for the day, adds
significance and complexity to his storytelling. Both Harlan men
taunted and challenged the governmental powers that be, demanding
that America tilt toward realizing its best self. This work is a
tour de force and every individual interested in the history of our
country’s political and societal steps, both forward and back,
should consider it must reading." — Elizabeth Dowling Taylor, New
York Times bestselling author of A Slave in the White House and The
Original Black Elite
"Canellos succeeds in showing us how central Justice Harlan's
roots— from his Kentucky background to his half-black brother,
Robert Harlan— were to shaping many of his views on controversial
social issues and landmark civil rights cases in American history."
— Nikki Taylor, Chair of the Department of History, Howard
University, and author of Frontiers of Freedom and America's First
Black Socialist
"The Great Dissenter is a superb achievement. Based on exhaustive
research and well written, this study fully explains the forces
that shaped a slaveholding Kentucky Unionist, a forward-looking
justice, and a great man." — James C. Klotter, The State Historian
of Kentucky, and author of Henry Clay and Kentucky
“Canellos’s tale of the parallel lives of Justice Harlan and
his mixed-race brother, Robert Harlan, delve into the complexities
of American life in post-Civil War America and make a significant
contribution to the history of one of the greatest Justices of the
Supreme Court and Robert Harlan, an unsung hero of African American
History.” — C. Ellen Connally, Judge (Retired);
Former Adjunct Professor of Law, University of Akron College of
Law, and member of the Board of Trustees of the Ohio History
Connection.
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