"This is a very careful, even painstaking examination of the Scottsboro Boys, the nine black teenagers convicted of raping two white women on a train ride through Alabama in early 1931. Acker (criminal justice, Univ. of Albany) alternately operates in the manner of a private investigator, a defense attorney, or an advocate for social justice. In the process, he intelligently explores the circumstances involving a fight between white and black young men; incendiary charges leveled by a pair of white women, Victoria Price and Ruby Bates; journalistic drumbeats both attacking and defending the accused and their accusers; multiple prosecutions; and the subsequent personal histories of those whose lives were forever changed by the case....Recommended." - Choice