The roles of African Americans may often have been underplayed in history books about Kentucky, but a six-year effort to offset that has produced the first in-depth look at the state's key African Americans and events. The encyclopedia, which has more than 1,000 entries, is intended not only as a wide-ranging historical guidebook for the public but also as a comprehensive new resource for teachers.
~Louisville Courier-Journal
Kentucky's impact on the national scene is registered in an array of notable figures.
~Gleaner
Filled with the long-undertold parts of Kentucky's rich history. Any lover of Kentucky history would be well-served by sitting down for an afternoon to peruse this book, then to keep it nearby for regular consultation.
~Kaintuckeean
This encyclopedia makes clear that the rich history of African Americans, like so much of the black experience, remains to be told. As more of these stories are readily available in Kentucky, perhaps this work will inspire those in other states to do the same.
~Kentucky Forward
This is an incredibly comprehensive collection of narratives revolving around black Kentuckians of the commonwealth, featuring contributions by over 150 writers.
~Chevy Chaser
Comprehensive and scholarly in scope, this tome is a model for future single-volume reference works about African Americans.... This work will be the standard on the subject and deserves consideration not only in Kentucky libraries but also in any setting where there is interest about African American history.
~Library Journal
This is a welcomed addition to the general references for the Commonwealth and will reveal much hitherto unknown facts.... There is a fascinating (and often disburbing) story on every page on the triumphs and tragedies of Kentucky's African Americans.
~Northern Kentucky Heritage
A work that reaches beyond the traditional to capture forgotten and hidden stories of people who helped shape the state and the nation forever.
~Kentucky Living
You can learn a lot just by thumbing through this encyclopedia.
~Kentucky Monthly
Drawing inspiration from an African American teacher in Logan County, KY, who when called upon to teach a Kentucky history class in the 1930s lamented that not one of the textbooks referenced the contributions of African Americans, series editors Smith, Karen Cotton McDaniel, and John A. Hardin spent over a decade bringing this rich collection to print.... This is an important reference source that other states should emulate.
~Library Journal Best Print Reference
The book is the story of a resilient people, who were long denied access to equal education and endured economic deprivation and racial prejudice. Hopefully it will inspire future generations. To quote the motto of the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, 'Be Great; Do Great Things.'
~Bowling Green Daily News
This unique and groundbreaking source will be indispensable for any library collection.
~Kentucky Library Association
Rarely has a reference book brought to light for the first time such a corpus of unknown details about historic events, individuals, or places pertaining to people of color associated with one state from its frontier origins until today.... It provides a rich and invaluable reference guide to the history of Kentuckians of color over time and across the commonwealth—chronicling their discrimination, their diversity, and their determination to live free, equal, and healthy lives.
~Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
[The authors] have certainly made an important contribution to fill in a state and local historical record that too often overlooks the contributions of African Americans.
~Journal of the Jackson Purchase Historical Society
This brilliant compilation treats the 'other' Kentucky—those people, stories, and institutions largely missing from mainstream histories.... The work is unique in its scope and the detail in which it chronicles black lives in one of the oldest states in the US.
~Choice
The Kentucky African American Encyclopedia is an important work that captures forgotten and oftentimes overlooked experiences of African Americans critical to the diverse history of Kentucky and the United States.
~Arkansas Review