“Thompson’s new book focuses on major figures such as Baraka, Baldwin, Cleaver, and Davis with an admirable rigor, even austerity, that ignores the polemics and moralizing judgments that often simplify each of their reputations, the better to show the unfolding of their ideas and thinking in a new context: postwar German political thought. This demanding book is worth the reader’s effort because it yields remarkable and fresh insights as it fulfills its goal ‘to relate the brilliance of their thought in full awareness of its flaws.’”