He Calls Me By Lightning: The Life of Caliph Washington and the Forgotten Saga of Jim Crow, Southern Justice, and the Death Penalty

S. Jonathan Bass
3.76
212 ratings 45 reviews
Caliph Washington’s life was never supposed to matter. As a black teenager from the vice-ridden city of Bessemer, Alabama, Washington was wrongfully convicted of killing an Alabama policeman in 1957. Sentenced to death, he came within minutes of the electric chair—nearly a dozen times. A Kafka-esque legal odyssey in which Washington’s original conviction was overturned three times before he was finally released in 1972, his story is the kind that pervades the history of American justice. Here, in the hands of historian S. Jonathan Bass, Washington’s ordeal and life are rescued from anonymity and become a moving parable of one man’s survival and perseverance in a hellish system. He Calls Me by Lightning is both a compelling legal drama and a fierce depiction of the Jim Crow South that forces us to take account of the lives cast away by systemic racism.
Genres: NonfictionHistoryAfrican AmericanRaceBiographyTrue CrimeSocial JusticeAmerican HistoryCrimePolitics
432 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
54 (25%)
4 star
80 (38%)
3 star
58 (27%)
2 star
14 (7%)
1 star
6 (3%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by S. Jonathan Bass

Lists with this book

Pachinko
Sing, Unburied, Sing
Exit West
Buses Are a Comin': Memoir of a Freedom Rider
The Strange Career of Jim Crow
Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-63
Southern History
191 books • 21 voters
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness
Between the World and Me
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
#BlackLivesMatter Reading List
623 books • 291 voters
Escape from Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West
The Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions
Dead Man Walking: The Eyewitness Account Of The Death Penalty That Sparked a National Debate