"Dollinger has reoriented the field of Black-Jewish relations in crucial ways and changed the way we think about American Jewish history in the post-World War II era. This is an important book and an exciting book" (Susannah Heschel, Shofar) "Marc Dollinger's well-written and provocative work provides an innovative interpretation of the mythic story of the alliance between Jews and Blacks forged over the twentieth century and rent asunder in the post–civil rights era as a result of the rise of Black Power. As Dollinger persuasively argues, Black Power, rather than being 'bad for the Jews' was 'good for the Jews'" (Rebecca T. Alpert, Journal of American History) "Marc Dollinger upends and revises our understanding of the relationship between Black and Jewish Americans in the mid-twentieth century. This is a thoroughly researched, well-written corrective to what he terms... 'historiographic self-congratulation'.... His superb work opens the door to other equally revelatory histories, and also to the possibility of building more honest, open, and effective alliances in our own century" (Marjorie N. Feld, American Jewish Studies Review) "An interesting and provocative study of Black-Jewish relations in the United States during the 1960s and '70s" - Edward Shapiro (Jewish Book Council)