Jefferson Morley is the D.C. editor of Salon. He has worked as an editor and reporter at The Washington Post, The Nation, The New Republic, and Harper's.
Praise for Jefferson Morley's Snow-Storm in August:
“History so fresh it feels alive. . . . After reading Jefferson
Morley’s vibrant account, one can never hear ‘The Star-Spangled
Banner’ the same way again.”
—David Maraniss, author of Barack Obama: The Story
“Fascinating. . . . An exploration of America’s capital city at a
time when the fault line over slavery had become impossible to
ignore. . . . [Morley’s] plunge beneath the surface of history
exposes realities more true to daily experience than executive
proclamations or speeches in Congress. . . . Snow-Storm in August
deepens our appreciation of how slavery made a mockery of the
founding and made the Civil War as close to inevitable as any event
in our history.”
—The Washington Post
“A vibrant and illuminating picture of the antebellum capital at a
time when national stability depended on placating the owners of
slaves. . . . [Morley] reveals a tangle of back stories that
eventually lead deep into a tension-filled landscape of class
resentments, provocative abolitionism and proslavery passions. It
is a world peopled with vivid characters both black and white,
among them, most intriguingly, the city’s district attorney,
Francis Scott Key, the author of ‘The Star-Spangled Banner.'"
—The Wall Street Journal
“Morley’s gripping, fast-paced narrative captures all the drama
that encompasses a rich cast of characters that includes Andrew
Jackson, Francis Scott Key, Roger Taney, Sam Houston, and a host of
others who inhabited the young nation’s capital. . . . Morley has
given readers a noteworthy, insightful look into an often
overlooked chapter in American history.”
—Booklist
“An elegant, readable narrative . . . touches on themes still
relevant today . . . racial tensions, simmering resentment over
economic disparity, influence peddling among the powerful and the
red-blue divide between conservatives and progressives.”
—The Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Jefferson Morley has vividly and factually recreated a largely
lost but pivotal time in Jacksonian Washington, an emerging, still
somewhat primitive capital city where racial tensions among its
complex mix of white, free black, and enslaved residents inevitably
lead to violence and push the debate over abolition into the houses
of Congress and the President. The historical characters, famous
and forgotten, come to life in affecting and surprising ways
without fictional artifice, a tribute to Morley’s meticulous
research and empathetic narrative style.”
—Leonard Downie Jr., former executive editor of The Washington
Post
“Absorbing. . . . This book reminds us how deeply entrenched
proslavery forces were in the nation’s capital and what a struggle
it was for African Americans to receive justice and for
abolitionists to be heard. . . . An enlightening account of racial
tension in pre-Civil War America.”
—BookPage
“Morley vividly recreates the episodes connected to the riot, and
dramatically depicts the personalities involved, giving important
insight into race relations before the Civil War.”
—The Columbus Dispatch
“Salon Washington correspondent Jefferson Morley boldly and
elegantly recreates a moment in time when free black businessmen
mingled with their white counterparts while proponents of slavery
and abolitionists struggled to co-exist in the nation’s bustling
capital. . . . A crackling good tale of the deep impact of race and
politics on a young nation struggling to create its identity.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“A sprightly social history. . . . Morley ably weaves the many
strands together. . . . A suspenseful tale, culminating in the
court of law where Key upheld the country’s oppression of
African-Americans and thereby helped shape the rancorous debate
over slavery. . . . Elegant and nimble history of a series of
events likely unknown to many readers.”
—Kirkus Reviews
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