"Stimulating, readable, and will provoke discussion."—Law and Politics Book Review
"In a non-technical, but thorough analysis of constitutional doctrine, the reader gets a full picture of the complexities of the rules applied by courts as to when hateful, obnoxious speech, and actions to ensure forceful speech are and are not permissible. The writer is gifted not only in her expertise on the subject matter but in her ability to write about complex legal, political, and social science issues for an audience of students and the informed, wider public."—Rhetoric & Public Affairs
"Strum provides general readers and students with a wonderful account of the events surrounding the proposed Nazi demonstration, the legal strategies used to derail or sanction the march, the constitutional issues raised by various legal claims, and the significance of those events and claims for civil liberties in the United States."—Journal of American History
"The book is refreshingly jargon free for a law-related subject and a fascinating read for communication scholars on the free speech right in US law and on the Americans’ real-life experience with hate speech as a protected expression."—Journal of Communication
"Strum is a knowledgeable guide to the legal intricacies of the various Skokie cases that wound their tangled way to judicial resolution."—American Jewish History
"In this short book, Strum offers her readers a wide variety of ways to think about where to draw the limits around controversial speech."—Journal of Illinois History
"By examining the historical and legal background of a proposed neo-Nazi march in a Chicago suburb, Strum offers the reader a thorough discussion of the problematic issue of hate speech in the US."—Choice
"A meticulous and graceful narrative of one of the most gripping free speech conflicts of modern times."—Rodney A. Smolla, author of Free Speech in an Open Society
"Strum succeeds brilliantly in telling the two stories of Skokie-the constitutional struggle over free speech and the human agony and conflict that permeated it. In clear, rigorous, and vivid prose, she recreates the legal and political culture when the case arose in the 1970s and then shows how more recent intellectual theories bear on what happened. A simply wonderful book."—Norman Dorsen, Stokes Professor, NYU, and president, ACLU, 1976–1991
"Strum paints a remarkably complete picture of the entire Skokie controversy and helps put the debate over the First Amendment protection for ‘hate speech’ into meaningful perspective."—David Goldberger, Ohio State University College of Law professor and former ACLU attorney for Frank Collin and the National Socialist Party of America
"A book that students will read eagerly and that teachers will find a pleasure to use."—Melvin I. Urofsky, author of Affirmative Action on Trial: Sex Discrimination in Johnson v. Santa Clara