It is one thing to say that black women were important to the Civil Rights Movement but, in Womanpower Unlimited and the Black Freedom Struggle in Mississippi, Tiyi M. Morris shows us how and why they were important. She expands our understanding of black women’s activism by showing it was much more than just voter registration and direct action campaigns, which dominate both the historiographical interpretations and the current popular conceptions of the movement. Instead, Black women’s activism encompassed the international peace movement, quality of life issues for poor blacks, equality of educational opportunities, work with children, feeding the hungry, and so much more, and it moved well outside the borders of the State of Mississippi. This was not a parochial, limited effort. The scope and impact of Womanpower Unlimited reached from Farish Street in Jackson and the Mississippi Delta to Vermont, Geneva, and beyond. It touched the lives of thousands of people in the few short years it was in existence.