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When the Stars Begin to Fall : Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America - Theodore R. Johnson

When the Stars Begin to Fall

Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America

By: Theodore R. Johnson

Hardcover | 22 July 2021

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  • A thought-provoking, deeply considered plan to inhibit the seemingly intractable racism in America, by a distinguished African-American writer and public policy scholar.
  • Johnson blends personal stories of his family's multi-generational experiences, as well as history, into his overarching narrative-it is as lyrical a reading experience as it is an inspiring and persuasive argument. His experience as a Navy commander gives him a unique perspective on the institutional change needed to overcome racism.
  • Johnson argues that racism is an existential threat to our democracy and to the idea and promise of America-that all men and women are inherently equal. He posits that racism is first and foremost a crime of the state that can only be overcome by establishing and fostering a color-conscious (not color-blind) national solidarity similar to the kind experienced by members of the military or by communities fighting towards a common goal in the wake of natural disasters. It is a non-partisan argument that demands the attention and cooperation of everyone.
  • Johnson's book captures the essence of the many titles regarding social justice that have topped the bestseller lists the past few months and turns it into actions that can engage and inspire us all.
  • Like James Baldwin, Johnson uses his love for America and its promise as a platform to call the nation to account for its shortcomings regarding equality.
  • Johnson posits that nations as entities have no feelings or morals, only interests; therefore we can disassemble racism if this is clearly in the nation's best interest. For example, the major civil rights legislation in the 1960s was strongly prompted by influential Soviet propaganda calling out American hypocrisy for proclaiming its democracy and yet subjugating minorities.
  • Johnson's argument for national solidarity is tangential to Ibram X. Kendi's in How To Be an Antiracist. Kendi poses a moral question to individuals; Johnson poses an existential question to the nation. To Johnson, racism is not binary in which you are either racist or you're not. He argues one can hold certain prejudices and still join the national solidarity if one understands eliminating racism is in the nation's best interest.
  • Johnson has been commissioned to write two major feature articles in the past four months. The New York Times Magazine, Sept. 20, 2020, "How Black Voters Became a Monolith" was so widely discussed the Times immediately asked him to write another feature following the election. The conservative National Review asked Johnson to write "America and Race," (June 2020), which outlined themes in his book.
  • Johnson has a fast-rising profile as Director of the Fellows program at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law School, which will support his book in every way possible. In addition to the New York Times Magazine and National Review, he has written articles for the Washington Post, the Atlantic, and other publications. He has been widely interviewed about race and politics on CNN, Fox, MSNBC, NPR, CBS News, Yahoo Finance, and on regional radio across the country, from New York to Detroit to Salt Lake City. He has appeared multiple times on the BBC and on Canada's CBC, and last winter for a full hour on C-Span's "Washington Journal."
  • The title When the Stars Begin to Fall is the last line of a Black spiritual, referring to the start of a new day as the stars disappear from view with the dawn-reflecting Johnson's ultimate optimism that a new day with racism suppressed can be achieved.
  • When the Stars Begin to Fall will attract readers drawn to the critiques of Isabel Wilkerson and Carol Anderson and also to the ultimate optimism of Jon Meacham and Eddie S. Glaude.
Industry Reviews

Praise for When the Stars Begin to Fall:

"A profound and thoughtful meditation on the challenges facing America-blending evocative family history with academic rigor-that offers a vision and a blueprint to move our country forward."-Heather McGhee, author of the national bestseller The Sum of Us

"An earnestly conceived road map for how America can achieve racial justice following centuries of white supremacy . . . A virtue of the book is his use of personal narrative to illustrate analytical points . . . Johnson writes with lyrical clarity, delivering tales that are by turns heartwarming and heartbreaking." -Chris LeBron, Washington Post

"You can also be a patriot and still embrace the fullness of American history. Johnson believes one of the keys to realizing our country's founding vision-the radical idea that all men are created equal, and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights-is understanding how our governing institutions have been warped by a long history of racial division. His new book, When the Stars Begin to Fall, is a call for reforming those institutions, for tackling systemic racism as an urgent threat to the core promise of our country."-Eric Johnson, Raleigh News & Observer

"A rare kind of book . . . Less a chronicle of outrage than an invitation to grapple with the lasting impact of centuries of racism . . . Timely and necessary . . . We desperately need bridge-building, and Ted Johnson is a master engineer."-Mona Charen, The Bulwark

"Johnson's argument about dismantling systemic racism relies on political philosophy, sociology, civil rights history, and his deep understanding of the government's legislation to control Black Americans. Johnson, a doctor of law and policy and former U.S. Navy commander, weaves his personal history with that of the nation to show that the personal and political are intertwined for all of us. His book builds a solid foundation for his call for a national solidarity that mixes deliberate democracy, national service, and civic education . . . Johnson's particular point-of-view makes his call to action feel like a patriotic duty." -Library Journal

"A passionate and persuasive exhortation to build a 'multiracial national solidarity to confront the race problem [in America] head-on' . . . Heartfelt and vividly written, this is a salient call for America to finally live up to its promise." -Publishers Weekly

"An impassioned denunciation of structural racism that invites a search for lasting answers." -Kirkus Reviews

"When the Stars Begin to Fall offers an impassioned account of what we need to do to save this country. Drawing on political philosophy and history, Theodore R. Johnson tells the truth about how racism remains an existential threat to American democracy. He writes beautifully about the resources found in the Black tradition that may help save us all. And he offers concrete suggestions about what we can do right now. In the end, the book is motivated by an unshakable love of country rooted in a renewed sense of civil religion that is not beholden to the idols of race. Johnson calls us to live together differently-to imagine a kind of solidarity with each other that finally leaves behind the very thing that threatens to destroy this fragile experiment in democracy. This is the kind of the book to read and reread and to argue over. When the Stars Begin to Fall is exactly what we need in this time of storm and stress." -Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., author of the national bestseller Begin Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own, and professor of African American Studies at Princeton

"Ted Johnson summons the courage and clarity to call forth the better angels in us to face the existential threat that structural racism poses for our beloved country. He traces his roots to the deep and wide foundations of our republic and calls on us to work through its maddening contradictions to seek and find that ever elusive 'more perfect union.' In this work, he challenges America to find her better self, precisely because he loves her so much." -Mitch Landrieu, former mayor of New Orleans and author of In the Shadow of Statues: A White Southerner Confronts History

"Ted Johnson melds his family history with political analysis in order to offer thought-provoking responses to the questions posed by Black Americans for centuries, from Frederick Douglass's 'What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July' to Fannie Lou Hamer's 'Is This America.' Johnson's answers comes out of his experiences of racism and patriotism, and he invites readers of all backgrounds to imagine that, despite all of the separation and hate in the United States, our fates are indeed intertwined." -Marcia Chatelain, Ph.D, author of Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America

"With an inspiring mix of passion and patriotism, Ted Johnson offers us a way forward. He blends stories of an all-American family with wide reading in philosophy, religion, history, politics, and sociology to develop a vitally important concept of what true national solidarity could look like. When the Stars Begin to Fall is scripture for a second great awakening, one that we need to create a foundation for the nation's next 250 years." -Anne-Marie Slaughter, CEO, New America

"Johnson believes one of the keys to realizing our country's founding vision-the radical idea that all men are created equal, and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights-is understanding how our governing institutions have been warped by a long history of racial division. [When the Stars Begin to Fall] is a call for reforming those institutions, for tackling systemic racism as an urgent threat to the core promise of our country."-News & Observer

"A unique book on race . . . When the Stars Begin to Fall: Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America is both candid about entrenched racism and hopeful that we can confront racism and live up to the American creed that 'all men are created equal.'" -Washington Post

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