"This book is not only an important and long-overdue study of the rhetoric of the Reverend Albert Cleage, but it also develops a robust analytical framework that avoids the limitations of the Eurocentrism that has informed much previous scholarship on prophetic rhetoric. Dr. Fisher’s dexterous close readings reveal the subtlety and power of Cleage’s sermons, while also amplifying the potential of these sermons to both describe and disrupt the intersections of rhetoric, race, and religion. The Reverend Cleage speaks through Dr. Fisher’s skillful analyses in a way that surely will, and surely should, engage a new generation of scholars. This is an eloquent, excellent book."
— Robert E. Terrill, Indiana University
"The Reverend Earle Fisher, Ph.D. has provided us with a feast of historical, theological, rhetorical, and prophetic proportions in his delving into the life, ministry, and times of the Rev. Albert Cleage, Jr. (Jaramogi Abebe Agyeman). Dr. Fisher's deep dive into Rev. Cleage's role in the black prophetic tradition as he preached and lived it out in Detroit in the late 1960s comes to us with compelling evidence and engaging writing. Even the pieces that I already knew leapt from the pages with fresh insight and nuance. Every historian, rhetorician, theologian, and homiletician needs this book. Indeed, everyone interested in the freedom enterprise for black peoples should read it. I hope they will."
— Rev. Valerie Bridgeman, Methodist Theological School in Ohio