“With No One Ever Asked, Arnold Rochvarg delivers a captivating story, full of historical facts, that gives one a great sense of a young, determined woman living out her values.”—Cassandra Jones Havard, Joseph F. Rice School of Law, University of South Carolina.
"The Civil Rights Movement had many well-known champions, including Martin Luther King, Jr., John Lewis, and Rosa Parks. No One Ever Asked, however, explores how an overlooked Philadelphia college student and other forgotten foot soldiers of her generation upended their lives in the 1960s to register Georgia and Mississippi voters and to fight for racial equality. An informative, well-researched book, No One Ever Asked recovers a lost narrative and sheds new light on that era’s grassroots campaigns to protect civil rights.”—U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar
“Iris Geller, a Philadelphia college sophomore ignited in part by the tragic murders in 1964 Mississippi of three young civil rights workers joined a movement that changed the nation. With great historical accuracy, No one Ever Asked deftly describes the civil rights and political backdrop of the volatile 1960’s. Rochvarg vividly recounts Iris’s passionate and controversial decision to leave all she had known to go on a “years long” journey to join the fight for a more just society and the long-term personal outcome of that consequential choice.” —José Anderson, University of Baltimore School of Law, author of Genius for Justice: Charles Hamilton Houston and the Reform of American