We were grateful to have our attention drawn to the many book reviews in the May 2022 issue (88:2) of the Journal of Southern History of interest to legal historians. These include:
The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution by Lindsay M. Chervinsky
Ari Helo
Irreconcilable Founders: Spencer Roane, John Marshall, and the Nature of America's Constitutional Republic by David Johnson
J. Charles Waldrup
At the Threshold of Liberty: Women, Slavery, and Shifting Identities in Washington, D.C. by Tamika Y. Nunley
Elizabeth Wood
Jim Crow in North Carolina: The Legislative Program from 1865 to 1920 by Richard A. Paschal
Abel A. Bartley
Reconstruction Politics in a Deep South State, Alabama, 1865-1874 by William Warren Rogers Jr.
Bertis D. English
A Question of Freedom: The Families Who Challenged Slavery from the Nation's Founding to the Civil War by William G. Thomas III
Alice L. Baumgartner
Forgotten Legacy: William McKinley, George Henry White, and the Struggle for Black Equality by Benjamin R. Justesen
Adam Burns
Threatening Property: Race, Class, and Campaigns to Legislate Jim Crow Neighborhoods by Elizabeth A. Herbin-Triant
Freddie L. Parker
The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre: A Photographic History by Karlos K. Hill
Ben Davidson
Alabama Justice: The Cases and Faces That Changed a Nation by Steven P. Brown
Ian J. Drake
The Movement: The African American Struggle for Civil Rights by Thomas C. Holt
Raymond Arsenault
Civil Rights in America: A History by Christopher W. Schmidt
Adam Lee Cilli