""'No country can tell its history truthfully until all its scrolls are unrolled.' . . . In Black Fire, as these narratives unfurl, the reader gets a close look at the broad diversity within the black Quaker experience. . . . For nearly a century, historians and philosophers . . . have struggled to understand and interpret the many moving parts of race, race relations, religion, and social justice. Black Fire presents some of those moving parts of the history relating to the Religious Society of Friends, unrolling some new scrolls and offering us new foundations from which to continue to explore African American stories, Quaker stories, and the intersections between the two."" Emma Lapsansky-Werner Emeritus Professor of History and Curator of the Quaker Collection Haverford College ----------- ""Black Fire is a landmark book that reframes our understanding of Quakerism, for it highlights the degree to which American Quakers were interracial almost from the outset, with black leaders shaping Friends' spiritual and reform visions. Brilliantly conceived and beautifully edited, it should be required reading for anyone interested in American religion and reform."" John Stauffer Chair of History of American Civilization at Harvard University Author of the award-winning Black Hearts of Men and Giants: The Parallel Lives of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln. ----------- ""Black Fire is a unique, much-needed contribution to the continuing conversation about religion and race in the United States, and the place of Quakers in it. The editors have created what may well be the definitive anthology."" Thomas Hamm, Quaker historian Professor of History, Earlham College Curator of the Friends Collection, Earlham College