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Good Trouble by Forest Issac Jones - Spotlight and Blog Tour

Tuesday, May 6, 2025



Hello and welcome to my stop on the tour for Good Trouble by Forest Issac Jones. Thank you so much for having me along. Please do click around and look at some of my other posts. I was so intrigued by the premise of this book but I'm really sad that I ran out of time to read it before this post was due. I do still plan on reading it. The issue of civil rights and civil freedoms is something that I am really interested in, especially the history of Northern Ireland and associated fights. 

My partner and I visited Northern Ireland a couple of years ago and we went to the Museum of Free Derry. It is amazing and I highly recommend it if you're in the area. It is simultaneously one of the most depressing and one of the most uplifting places I've ever been. Depressing because of the sheer scale of human misery inflicted upon the Catholics of Northern Ireland - especially on Bloody Sunday, which features heavily and which was so interesting to learn a lot about - but uplifting because of the power of people. The people who will fight for their rights and who will come together to make a movement. There is mention in the museum of the Black Civil Rights Movement and how there was support on both sides. So this book was really ideal for me and I will most likely read it on holiday. 

Let me show some of my photos of Derry and some of the murals. When we were there we saw a lot of Free Palestine graffiti and Palestinian flags, which was amazing too. All these photos are copyrighted to me and may not be copied or used elsewhere. 











This is the blurb for this book: 

Good Trouble will show the strong connection between the Black Civil Rights Movement in the United States and the Catholic Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland – specifically the influence of the Montgomery to Selma march on the 1969 Belfast to Derry march through oral history, based on numerous interviews of events leading up to both marches and afterwards. This is close to the author’s heart as both of his parents marched to integrate lunch counters and movie theatres in Salisbury, North Carolina, in 1963 as college students. His mother was at the 1963 March to Washington where Martin Luther King gave his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech.

Award winning author Julieann Campbell (On Bloody Sunday) wrote the introduction for Good Trouble, looking back at her times growing up in Derry, in the heart of the Catholic Civil Rights Movement. Jones travelled to Dublin, Belfast and Derry to conduct interviews for the book. In all, he did fifteen interviews with people who were involved in the movement in Northern Ireland (including Billy McVeigh – featured in the BAFTA winning documentary, Once Upon A Time In Northern Ireland) and in the United States (including Richard Smiley and Dr. Sheyann Webb-Christburg – both were at Bloody Sunday in Alabama and on the Selma to Montgomery march among others). Jones was also able to talk with Eamonn McCann (he took part in the Belfast to Derry march in 1969; he was the John Lewis of Northern Ireland).

Unlike most books on Northern Ireland, this goes into detail about the connection and the influence between the two movements. Also, most focus on Bloody Sunday and not the pivotal incidents at Burntollet Bridge and the Battle of the Bogside. Building off of unprecedented access and interviews with participants in both movements, Jones crafts a gripping and moving account of these pivotal years for both countries.



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