"In [this] well-researched biography, [Frank Porter] Graham emerges as more complex and human, and his career exposes the limitations of white liberalism in the post–World War II South. . . . A well-crafted and thoughtful account."—Journal of Southern History "An engaging and important book. . . . [T]his biography offers important lessons for how one man navigated the complexities of racism, higher education, politics, labor relations, and internationalism during mid-twentieth-century America."—Journal of American History"[Frank Porter Graham] raises important questions for those now trying to work on, learn at, or live nearby campuses whose uses have dramatically changed since the Founding. . . . Link's account of Graham's life . . . adds to the recent reconsiderations of how the academy has changed and its place in American life has dramatically shifted."—Reviews in American History