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A Sin by Any Other Name is the rarest of books—a social justice coming of age memoir. In these pages, young pastor Robert Lee, a descendent of General Robert E Lee, grapples with his family history and invites southerners to finally come of age by facing their own history of racism.
— Diana Butler Bass, author of Grounded
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One of the best things that happened to me over the last two years was getting to listen to Rev. Rob Lee talk—and not just talk, but share ideas of how we all can do a better as Christians, non-Christians, as human-beings. I think he may be on to something.
— Whoopi Goldberg
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Lee shares his path to fighting for racial justice in this revealing memoir . . . open minded readers will appreciate Lee’s perspective on race in America as well as his story of working to overcome division, bigotry, and his own family’s fraught history.
— Publishers Weekly
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A story of transformation and conversion that is as personal as it is public. Grappling with issues of family, religion and politics, Rob Lee shows us how to move towards truth in a graceful way.
— James Martin, SJ, Jesuit priest and author of Jesus: A Pilgrimage
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Robert W. Lee IV’s coming of age story is an impassioned testimony of what it means to grow up with a famous name and realize it’s a curse—unless you find a way to use it for good.
— Samuel Wells, vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London
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If you're from the South, live in the South, or think of the South as the "real America," you need to read this love letter to the South from Rob Lee, a nephew (generations removed) of Robert E Lee. It is beautifully written, brimming with love, and ready to explode with an urgent message for our times. A Sin by Any Other Name could change the world, and you could be part of the change by reading it now.
— Brian D. McLaren, author of The Great Spiritual Migration
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Rob Lee calls our racist past and present for what it is, from a peculiarly Christian point of view—sin. In this book Rob helps us to name our sin and to move from confession to reparation, reconciliation, and restoration.
— Will Willimon, professor at Duke Divinity School, author of Who Lynched Willie Earle
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The idols of white supremacy and racism won’t topple over by themselves. But Rev. Robert W. Lee, IV, a descendent of General Robert E. Lee, has been working hard to give them an almighty push off of their pedestals. Rev. Lee has written a “love letter” to his beloved south, urging his fellow white citizens to quit idolizing a harmful past, and challenging them to work together to help construct a more just and equitable racial future.
— Rev. Dr. Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, professor of theology and former president, Chicago Theological Seminary