"Other scholars have revealed parts of this story, but John B. Kirby has developed unsuspected ramifications and provided insights and flashes of recognition. An impressively researched and clearly written contribution to the intellectual history of the Great Depression." --Raymond Wolters, Journal of American History
"Inspired by Gunnar Myrdal's conclusion that the Roosevelt era established an unprecedented relationship between the federal government and black Americans, John B. Kirby has investigated the responses of selected black and white figures to New Deal liberal theology.... A well-researched, clearly organized work of intellectual history." --Theodore Kornweibel Jr., Journal of Southern History
"An Original and sophisticated contribution to depression literature." --Joe M. Richardson, The American Academy of Political and Social Science