When John Calvin Marshall graduated from Harvard in 1956, he was prepared for a life of teaching and relative tranquility. But history had another plan for him: in the nascent civil rights movement of the 1960s, he became a leader and shining symbol of the new generation of blacks who were demanding their full rights as citizens. "And All Our Wounds Forgiven" is the story of John Calvin Marshall's brief, turbulent, and charismatic life, which ended-perhaps inevitably-in assassination. The novel is told in four alternating voices: that of John Calvin Marshall's wife, Andrea; of Lisa Adams, the young white woman who heard Marshall speak and fell under his spell, later becoming his trusted aide and passionate mistress; of Bobby Card, a black civil rights leader operating in the Heart of Darkness-the Deep South of the 1960s-as Marshall's chief lieutenant in the field; and finally, of Marshall himself. There are, too, leading figures of the time-Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, J. Edgar Hoover, Malcolm X-whose meetings and conversations with Marshall add insights and historical perspective to the unfolding events.Here, veteran author re-envisions the Martin Luther King story in fearful, exciting, and violent times.
Political and provocative, "And All Our Wounds Forgiven" is most of all a moving and tender love story about one of this century's most charismatic black leaders and the two women he loved.