c.2018, St. Martinโs Press
$23.99 ($32.50 Canada)
294 pages
โWe have to talk.โ
Itโs never good when someone tells you that. Even if itโs said with a smile and a pat on the back, you can feel doom in those words. โWe have to talkโ never helps anyone except when, as in โWhat Truth Sounds Likeโ by Michael Eric Dyson, it does.
In late May of 1963, Robert โBobbyโ Kennedy, attorney general for President John Kennedy, did something remarkable enough to make the front page of The New York Times: he had a โsecretโ meeting with a group of Black leaders to discuss โan โexplosive situation’โ that could impact the nation.
For many reasons, Civil Rights among them, 1963 was a โlandmark.โ Since taking the oath of office, Jack Kennedy had walked a fine line between politics and social justice. He and Bobby were โvillains in the eyes of โฆ white bigotsโ for their support for African Americans and Martin Luther King Jr., in particular, though Jack really only โtiptoed around the prospect of equal rights for Negroes.โ Still, in Dysonโs telling, Bobby almost seemed smug in what he thought he knew about 1963โs simmering atmosphere when he met with James Baldwin, Harry Belafonte, Lena Horne, playwright Lorraine Hansberry and activist Jerome Smith.
He wanted acknowledgment and gratitude for what was being done on behalf of Black Americans. Instead, the โNegroesโ gave Kennedy a verbal trouncing.
Smith said Kennedy โdonโt have no idea what trouble is โฆโ
Hansberry threatened to give guns to people on the street (โpoetic license,โ Dyson muses). Baldwin fanned the flames, Smith dismissed the meeting as โcocktail-party patter,โ and Kennedy fumed before Hansberry dropped a final bombshell and Kennedyโs guests stalked out.
In the days after this seminal meeting, Kennedy had chance to ruminate. Heโd heard โunvarnished truths in ways white ears โฆ were unaccustomed to.โ It changed his life and altered his political career with a lesson that still resonates, especially for liberals and those who are trying this year to capture Congressional seats.
โItโs a lesson we must learn today, if we are to overcome our differences and embrace a future as bright as our dreams allow,โ Dyson says.
โWhat Truth Sounds Likeโ is both the first book you should want this summer โ and the last.
Absolutely no one would ever mistake this for a beach read; itโs too serious and thought-provoking for vacation frivolity and itโs absolutely not skimmable like a novel.
Conversely, considering whatโs going on in the nation and in the world, this may be the most important book of the season. Author Michael Eric Dyson shows how a meeting held so long ago actually offers a sort of blueprint for anyone concerned about current issues of race. That includes โartistsโ and entertainers who seem to oppose what Baldwin wouldโve advocated, and activists who need to know their history.
Give yourself plenty of time with this book. Pick it up, put it down, read anew, and it may help you to change minds. For sure, โWhat Truth Sounds Likeโ holds ideas youโll want to talk about.

