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By viewing the events in Derry through the prism of those in Selma, Forest Jones draws attention to the striking commonality in cause and consequence of both the American and Northern Irish Civil Rights movements, and the awful violence which attempted to silence those twin cries for equality. In doing so, he creates an insightful and compelling examination of a terrible period in our shared histories and highlights the need for society to learn from the past for a more equitable future.-Brian McGilloway, Sunday Times and NY Times Bestselling author.
An important book that traces the parallels between two different fights for civil rights.-Sharon Dempsey Author, Queens University in Belfast
The first comprehensive look at the connection between the two Civil Rights movements in the USA and Northern Ireland. Jones has written a book that is worthy of its subject.-Chris Riches, Correspondent for North-West England and Wales on the Daily Express.
Jones is a detailed researcher, and Good Trouble is based on a wide array of material, old and new...Jones offers affecting accounts of both the Selma to Montgomery march and the Belfast to Derry march. His book reads like a historical thriller at times. A must read.-Richard Moriarty, North West District Editor of The Sun.
Good trouble' [...] is, very much, a historical tale of the good, the bad and the ugly, and ultimately, the good again. -Belfast Telegraph
Mr. Issac Jones examines the movements' origins, its links, marches, protests, riots and dangerous confrontations, and the roles of individuals that helped bring change. [...] The book acknowledges how the anti-interment march in Derry that ended in the Bloody Sunday massacre was inspired by the Black Civil Rights campaign. -Derry Journal
This is a wide-ranging story about connections between the civil rights movements in Alabama and Northern Ireland. -The Irish Times
While many scholars and journalists have noted similarities between the Civil Rights Movement to end racial segregation and discrimination in the US and the similarly named movement in Northern Ireland to gain equality for Catholics, Jones (Hollins Univ.) is the first to systematically compare the two movements. Good Trouble is based on extensive research and more than 20 interviews with individuals who were active in the two movements. -CHOICE