| Author/Contributor(s): | Hopps, Corey M. |
| Publisher: | Urban Renaissance |
| Date: | 1/26/2027 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Freedom Summer is a historical drama set against the turbulent backdrop of the American Civil Rights Movement during the summer of 1963. At its heart is Wesley Parlor, a successful Black attorney who has spent years distancing himself from the painful realities of his Southern upbringing in hopes of building a safer, more respectable life.
But when Wes receives word that his father has been brutally attacked and later dies under suspicious circumstances in their Georgia hometown, he is forced to return to the place he swore he had escaped forever.
What begins as a funeral quickly becomes a journey into a buried history of racial violence, silence, and resistance. As Wes investigates the truth surrounding his father’s death, he uncovers long-hidden secrets connecting local politicians, law enforcement, wealthy white families, and generations of intimidation designed to keep Black citizens powerless.
At the same time, the town itself stands at a crossroads. Young activists and local organizers are risking their lives to register Black voters and challenge segregation during one of the most dangerous periods of the Civil Rights era. Wes finds himself caught between the cautious survivalism of older generations and the fearless determination of younger freedom fighters demanding immediate change.
Both intimate and epic in scope, Freedom Summer is a story about memory, identity, generational pain, and the cost of freedom. It examines what it means to return home, to reclaim one’s voice, and to discover that true courage is not the absence of fear—but the willingness to stand anyway.
At its core, the novel asks a haunting question:
How old does a Black man have to be before the world stops calling him “boy”?