''The first book-length scholarly analysis of Stokes...Moore examines in lively detail key moments of confrontation over urban renewal, public housing, the police, and civil unrest ...Moore has successfully re-created the key events that influenced Stokes's tenure and symbolized for the nation a new form of ''black power.'' --Choice ''Deftly mixing biography with local urban history, Moore details Stokes's struggle as a civil rights veteran to transform Northern black protest into urban black political power that made a difference in the lives of the frustrated black middle class and the disenfranchised lower classes... A powerful portrait of the history and politics of rust belt cities... Highly recommended.'' -- Library Journal ''Leonard Moore does a wonderful job of outlining the expectations and disappointments associated with African American leadership. ... Moore's book is a must read for all those interested in understanding the life and legacy of America's first modern African American mayor.'' --Ohio History ''In the last decade, American historians have started wrestling in earnest with the difficult topic of black power. Leonard N. Moore makes an important contribution in this much-needed examination of the political career of Carl B. Stokes, the first black mayor of a major American city, and what it can tell us about the rise of black political power in the late 1960s and 1970s.'' --American Historical Review 84-7786-693-7