A trenchant survey of Black history-and an argument for why every American, of every ethnicity, needs to learn it...An important, sympathetic effort to elucidate matters of Black lives while expanding intellectual horizons.
Kirkus
Engaging and thought-provoking for a wide range of readers...Moore sets forth provocative questions-for instance, 'What came first? Slavery or racism?'-while simultaneously providing complex, nuanced answers.
Texas Highways
[A] timely book...Moore guides readers-many of whom Moore, who is Black, presumes will be white-through Black history and his own personal experience in academia.
Texas Observer
Moore is a scholar and professor of history whose passion for teaching oozes off the page...Teaching Black History to White People illustrates his uniquely engaging pedagogy that has won awards and made Moore a highly respected and sought-after professor and speaker...What I like most about this book is that Moore explains how teaching Black history, something he's done for three decades, was different during the 2020 racial uprisings, and he provides actionable insights for white people (or any non-Black person) to counteract anti-Blackness and racism in America.
EdSurge
An important book that joins the ranks of Isabel Wilkerson's Caste, Henry Lewis Gates's Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow, and James W. Loewen's Lies My Teacher Told Me in assuring that all of American history is preserved and taught.
Southern Literary Review