Sign up to save your library
With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title
Title found at these libraries:
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
In the shadows of American history burns a truth many dare not confront—a truth cloaked in white hoods, echoing through fiery crosses and whispered threats. The Brotherhood of Hate: The Klan's War on Freedom is a searing journey into the origins, evolution, and unrelenting legacy of the Ku Klux Klan. From its birth in the smoldering ruins of the Confederacy to its modern rebranding in the digital age, this book unveils a chilling chronicle of how racism can be ritualized, normalized, and made into law.
Through courtroom betrayals, backwoods executions, and political alliances veiled in moral virtue, the Klan did not merely terrify—it governed. It wrapped itself in patriotism while desecrating democracy, invoking God while lynching the innocent. It infiltrated pulpits, statehouses, and school boards, embedding hate into the very DNA of the nation's institutions.
This is not just a story of murder and mobs. It is a story of silence, complicity, and the high price of forgetting. With powerful prose and unflinching research, this book traces the arc of hate from Pulaski to Charlottesville, revealing how white supremacy adapts, survives, and thrives.
But woven into this darkness are the sparks of resistance—ordinary people who refused to cower, voices that pierced the hooded veil, and a justice system slowly roused from slumber.
This is a call to remember. A call to witness. A call to never let the torch of terror burn unchallenged again.
The Brotherhood of Hate is not just history. It is a warning.
Step into the chilling history of America's most infamous hate group in The Brotherhood of Hate: The Klan's War on Freedom. This powerful exposé pulls back the curtain on the Ku Klux Klan's 150-year campaign of terror, exploring its origins, rise to national power, and continued influence in modern America.
Through haunting detail and gripping storytelling, this book reveals how the Klan transformed from a secret society of Confederate veterans into a political powerhouse that influenced elections, infiltrated law enforcement, and reshaped public policy through fear and violence. From the embers of the Civil War to the rise of white supremacist militias in the digital era, every chapter unveils the shocking truths that history textbooks too often sanitize or omit.
Readers will discover:
The Brotherhood of Hate is not only a detailed historical account—it's a mirror reflecting the systemic racism that continues to haunt America. With unflinching research and searing analysis, this book challenges readers to confront the past and defend the future.
Perfect for readers of historical non-fiction, civil rights literature, and anyone seeking to understand the true depth of America's racial divide.