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Reviewed by Anne Boling for Readers' Favorite
Sokol's approach was unique, for his focus is on the ordinary white southerners. Sokol is a doctoral candidate in American history at the University of California, Berkeley.
Well-researched and thoughtful, previous to the civil rights movement people lived by tradition and segregation seemed natural and unchallengeable for many whites southerners. By the '50s many of them recognized that segregation was a social creation not a natural order. Sokol demonstrates that common white southerners were stereotyped as potbellied, tobacco-chewing, Confederate-flag-waving "good old boys." The stereotyping hid the diverse reaction to the attack on prejudice. Of course there were those who lambasted "outside agitators," those that refused to accept blacks as equals, those that refused them service or seats. Many felt that blacks were intruding on their lives, taking over their seats in their restaurants, schools and theaters. But there were also many willing to embrace the movement. Understanding social revolution is rarely simple and always laden with the lure to generalize. Sokol strives cautiously, empathetically, and resourcefully and evades the consequence of naive judgment.
There Goes My Everything takes a look at the Civil Rights Era from a differentperspective. There Goes My Everything is an astute scrutiny of a grave era and unparalleled description of the stance of white southerners' concerning events that surrounded them during the turbulent years of 1945-1975. It is told from their own point of view and discloses the conflicting jumble of opinions. The Civil Rights Era changed the life of all Americans no matter the color of their skin.
This book presents a view that is a dramatic and should have been written long ago. I higly recommend There Goes My Everything to all Americans.