From a preeminent King scholar, the origin story of the man, minister, and civil rights hero who would lead the nation and change the world.
We know who Martin Luther King, Jr. became, but who was he at the beginning of his life? How did his youth inform his outlook and his approach to activism and service?
Before Martin Luther King, Jr. was a civil rights leader, the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, and a global hero, he was an emotional boy, and a middling high school student devoted to fashion, dancing, and dating. As he headed to college, he left the Jim Crow South for a summer job that would test his oratory skills preaching in the tobacco fields of Connecticut and ultimately give him a sense of hope for a life of racial peace and harmony.
Lerone A. Martin, Centennial Professor at Stanford University and the Faculty Director of the Martin Luther King Institute, traces the youthful roots of this legendary American to reveal the makings of a mighty force. Filled with revelations and written with compassion, Young King offers a new understanding of the influential preacher and activist’s emotional life, his youthful confusion about his future and career direction, his inspiration to fight for justice, his teenage missteps, and his first revelations of courage. As America undergoes another era of turmoil and change, this powerful biography offers encouragement for readers at a similar moment of life and provides an understanding of how greatness comes to light.
Martin illuminates both King’s weaknesses and the social failures that shaped him, including the brutal racism he endured growing up. This vital and essential work is a testament to how history shapes a leader.
Young King includes rarely seen black-and-white photographs of an adolescent MLK from his high school days and college years.
Lerone A. Martin is the Martin Luther King, Jr., Centennial Professor in Religious Studies and director of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute at Stanford University.
Thank you @netgalley and Amistad for the #gifted copy.
I really enjoyed reading this book. It taught me a lot about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that I didn’t know before. The story focuses on his childhood and the influences that shaped him into the man he became.
From the passing of his grandmother to attending public school for the first time, we see these moments from a different perspective.
Highly recommended if you’re interested in learning about his early life and beginnings.
Summary: An in depth look at MLK's context and influences as he developed into an adult.
I have previously read Lerone Martin's biography of J Edgar Hoover. So I preordered the audiobook without paying attention to who the narrator was. The narrator was Blair Underwood. I was in high school and college while he was on LA Law. I was never regularly watched the show, but it was impossible to not know who Blair Underwood was in the late 80s and early 90s. I didn't know this until this book, but he has written or co-written three books and narrated about 20. I don't want to take way from Lerone Martin's writing, but once I got used to Blair Underwood's style, I think he really helped to make the book. (Generally in a nonfiction book I prefer a fairly straight reading. Underwood did consistent voices for the regular characters, he laughed when the content suggested that the character would have been laughing and he did a very good impression of MLK's voice. Not everyone could have pulled that off well, but Underwood did.)
I think I would label Young King as a developmental biography. The point here isn't what King did, but how he became the man that we now know. Contextually Lerone Martin is trying to paint a psychological and sociological picture of the boy and his community. Of course there are chapters on faith and family and racism, but I think it is also important that there were both long sections on how King was shaped by his father and the conflict he had with his father. Similarly, there were sections not just on how he was shaped by the Black church, but on the ways that he rejected the Black church as overly emotional and for a while was an atheist, before coming back into the church and eventually feeling a call to ministry. King was both brilliant and highly academically underprepared for both college and seminary, and that was made worse by his youth and immaturity (going to college at 15 and going to seminary for a masters at 19).
I glanced around at some reviews and there were some complaints about the speculation or contextualization of the book. One such speculation was that it appears that Malcolm Little (eventually Malcolm X) was selling suits to the tobacco workers in the same community where Martin Luther King was working in the tobacco fields when he was 15. There is no evidence that they met, but I think it was well worth noting that they were both working in the same area and there is evidence that Malcolm sold suits to men that Martin was working with. Much more common is that Lerone Martin is telling the broader story of the context that King grew up in. There are long descriptions of what train travel was like for Black people in the south during the era when King took the train by himself for the first time. Or what how the Hartford, CT area was receiving Black migrant workers in the era when King picked tobacco over two different summers.
I know a good bit about King, but I think Young King did a better job looking at who King was and his strengths and weaknesses than pretty much anything I have read. Eig's book I think also was very clear about King's weaknesses, but I think that Lerone Martin is exploring how he developmentally came to some of them. The womanizing, the sexism, the plagiarism, the style of speaking, the confidence and orientation toward "doing something big" are all explored here. That isn't to say this is a book that overly focusses only on negatives, I think Eig and Lerone Martin, and what I know from Jeanne Theoharis' approach in A More Beautiful and Terrible History or her narrow look at King's Northern campaigns, all know King's limitations were real.
As I read Young King, I was reading the first of Gary Dorrien's trilogy on the rise of the Black Social Gospel movement. Flawed leaders within the Black civil rights community were not new. (There is no such thing as a non-flawed leader.) I think Lerone Martin has done a great service here focusing on the young King in a way that no full biography can. There are places where I would probably cut a bit, but there are always editorial decisions that have to be made. But Young King is well worth reading.
I received an advanced reader copy of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review on my Goodreads page.
Young King: The Making of Martin Luther King Jr. is an engaging, deeply researched portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. in the years before he became the defining figure of the American civil rights movement. Covering his life from childhood through the formative period leading up to meeting his future wife, the book offers a vivid look at the experiences and influences that shaped the man the world would later come to know.
What makes this biography especially compelling is the way the author broadens the lens beyond King himself. Rather than presenting his journey in isolation, the narrative places him alongside other young Black men coming of age in the same era—including Malcolm X—to explore how similar circumstances could produce vastly different worldviews and paths. One particularly fascinating section examines a shared summer experience in which King and Malcolm may have crossed paths without ever meeting, yet emerged with contrasting perspectives that would later influence their very different approaches to justice and leadership. That comparative framing adds depth and nuance, and it kept me completely absorbed.
The writing is accessible and consistently engaging, balancing scholarly detail with storytelling momentum. I appreciated the inclusion of lesser-known anecdotes and context that many other biographies either overlook or pass by quickly. These moments make King feel less like a distant historical icon and more like a young man in the process of becoming himself, struggling, learning, and refining his beliefs in real time.
Overall, this is an insightful and rewarding read for anyone interested in American history, biography, or the human story behind influential leaders. It offers fresh angles even for readers already familiar with King’s life and legacy. I highly recommend adding this one to your shelves when it releases on May 5, 2026.
YOUNG KING – THE MAKING OF MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. – by Lerone Martin
‘We know who Martin Luther King, Jr. became, but who was he at the beginning of his life? How did his youth inform his outlook and activism?
‘Before Martin Luther King, Jr. was a civil rights leader, a Nobel Laureate, and a global hero, he was an emotional boy, a middling high school student devoted to fashion, dancing, and dating. Lerone A. Martin, Faculty Director of the Martin Luther King Institute at Stanford University, traces these roots to develop a fuller understanding of the influential preacher’s emotional life, his youthful confusion about his future and career direction, his teenage missteps, and his inspiration to fight for justice.’
ML, as he is referenced in the book, grew up, like I did, in an integrated neighborhood wherein playing and friendship with other kids had nothing to do with, in our eyes, the color of one’s skin.
Then one day, ML is told by the white kids' parents that they can not play with their kids anymore. That you are less than because of the color of your skin. This is the nightmare that ML and millions of adults and children of color live through for decades during the Jim Crow era.
My heart aches throughout reading this book, a coming-of-age biography about Martin Luther King Jr. I can’t even begin to imagine the level of psychological and physical damage racism, segregation, murder, and hate caused adults and children like Martin Luther King Jr. during the Jim Crow era.
‘“There have been times that I have been carried out of myself by something greater than myself and to that something I gave myself.”‘
‘ML was not pursuing the ministry as just another job. He was on a divine errand to give himself to something greater.’
Highly Recommend!
Thank you, NetGalley and Amistad (HarperCollins Publishers), for providing me with an eBook ARC of YOUNG KING at the request of an honest review.
P.S. Thank you, Publishers for including photographs in the ARC, it means a lot to the reader.
Young King: The Making of Martin Luther King Jr. by Lerone A. Martin
Thank you Harper One for the gifted copy.
There have been countless books written about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., but what makes Young King stand out is its focus on the years before the speeches, before the marches, and before he became a historical figure larger than life. Lerone A. Martin does an impressive job peeling back the mythology and presenting King as a young man still trying to figure himself out.
What I appreciated most was how human this portrayal felt. This isn’t the polished, textbook version of MLK most of us grew up learning about. Martin shows his insecurities, youthful mistakes, ambitions, frustrations, and the emotional experiences that shaped him long before the Civil Rights Movement placed him at the center of history. That approach made the book feel far more personal and grounded.
The research here is extensive, sometimes almost overwhelmingly so. There’s a tremendous amount of historical context packed into the narrative, and while I admired the scholarship behind it, there were stretches where the level of detail slowed the pacing a bit for me. Still, it’s hard to criticize a biography for being thorough, especially when the material itself is so compelling.
I also found the sections dealing with racism, surveillance, religion, and the pressures surrounding Black leadership in America especially powerful. The book does a good job reminding readers that King’s courage did not emerge in a vacuum. It was shaped by fear, resistance, family, faith, and relentless societal pressure from a very young age.
Overall, this is a thoughtful and deeply researched biography that adds meaningful context to one of the most studied figures in American history. It humanizes King without diminishing his legacy, which is not an easy balance to strike.
The MLK biography that finally peels back the 'I Have a Dream' sticker.
Lerone A. Martin’s Young King: The Making of Martin Luther King Jr. isn’t the MLK biography you think you’ve already read. Most of us are taught the "I Have a Dream" version of King as if he dropped from the sky fully formed as a saint. Martin does something much more interesting: he shows us the machinery and the struggle behind the icon.
The book focuses on the early years, specifically how King navigated the intense pressures of the FBI, the church, and the political landscape of the 1950s. It’s a fascinating look at how a young man’s faith and radicalism were forged in a crucible of surveillance and skepticism.
Why This Hits Different: - The FBI’s Shadow: We often hear about the FBI’s harassment of King, but Martin illustrates how systemic that pressure was even before the peak of the Civil Rights Movement. It reads like a political thriller at times. - The "Human" MLK: You see a King who is figuring it out. He’s not a monument; he’s a student, a son, and a young leader trying to balance tradition with a burning need for change. - The Research: This isn’t just vibes. Martin uses a massive amount of declassified documents to show how the "National Security State" was essentially the primary antagonist in King’s early life.
If you’re tired of the sanitized, "Hallmark version" of history, pick this up. It makes King’s eventual achievements feel even more miraculous because you finally see the weight of the world he was carrying. It’s dense but deeply rewarding. It’s the kind of history that makes you look at modern activism through a completely different lens. "To understand the prophet, you have to understand the man before the mountain."
Title: Young King: The Making of Martin Luther King Jr. Author: Lerone Martin Publisher: Amistad Reviewed By: Arlena Dean Rating: Five Review: "Young King...The Making of Martin Luther King Jr.
My Review:
This author, Lerone Martin, did a wonderful job telling a powerful story about Martin Luther King Jr. In fact, Martin Luther King Jr. is one person I can truly say was important throughout his life. From his childhood, family discipline, education, to his early encounters with racial things that showed the power of what went on with him in his life. This is one of those well-written reads that, once you start reading, you will find it will be hard to put down due to all that is in the remarkable read, as you are pulled into MLK Jr.'s life. Be ready for many interesting details, and you will find out a lot about his personal life. If you are interested in a good biography that involves American history, you have come to the right place, because this non-fiction read will give you that and so much more.
Young King is a powerful and necessary book that shifts our gaze from the mythologized figure of Martin Luther King Jr. to the boy and young man he once was. It roots him among working people: farmers, laborers, boys and men and shows how he spoke not to the elite but with his community, soul to soul. We witness his early formation: riding trains through Jim Crow, stepping into a church basement as “ML,” and emerging into the sanctuary as Minister ML King Jr., assistant pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church.
As the first book to center his childhood and adolescence in this way, it feels like an act of restoration. The story holds the weight of what shaped him including racial violence, a school shooting, and the quiet accumulation of witnessing injustice showint us that his leadership was forged through lived experience. Young King is ultimately a story about becoming and an invitation to reflect on who we are becoming too.
I really wanted to rate this book higher. The topic of MLK's childhood and formative years as a teen and young adult is not really written about a lot. But I found a large part of the book to stray into events in great detail only to state that the author was not aware if MLK was present at those events or if he had expressed thoughts about the events. For some readers who are completely uninformed about Jim Crow segregation the descriptions of these events perhaps provide some background. I just felt that too much text was devoted to these events that don't seem to have a direct connection to MLK
I’d call this biography “chapter 1” in the story of MLK’s life and it does an effective job taking the icon off his pedestal, and embracing his humanity, even as it lays the groundwork for what we all know comes next. I would probably not recommend this for someone who doesn’t yet know much about MLK, because it feels more like context for who he became, which you need to know first in order to care about who he started as — which was, more or less, a regular kid in a tough world who developed a spark. That said, for someone familiar with his greatness, this book might lend today’s child inspiration that greatness could live in them too. A worthwhile read and addition to the MLK lore.
The reading was based on the life of Martin that is not heavily spoken about. There were topics that were spoken about that gave a deeper thought as to how he got to wanted a better life for himself and the Black culture. Things that he has saw and personal things he had to learn to get to where he needed to be in life. He made some choices before that would have led him down a totally different path.
Thank you to Netgalley and Amistad for the early read.
I didn’t realize what I’d signed up for when I requested this book. The author has so much information about young MLK that I didn’t know anything about. We see that he was human and flawed. I enjoyed learning more about him. If the author could publish part 2 for the next chapter of MLK’s life, I’d read that, too.
I received this ARC from NetGalley for my honest review.
A thoughtful biography that explores Martin Luther King Jr.’s early life before he became a civil rights icon. It shows him as a relatable young man navigating school, identity, and purpose while growing up in a deeply segregated America. The book highlights how his personal struggles and experiences shaped his future leadership and vision for justice. Insightful, humanizing, and inspiring.
Never knew anything about MLK other than the basics except most elementary school student students learn. It was nice to get some more information about his upbringing and his view of religion/politics growing up. I appreciated that it was honest about his faults/unique details that many political figures don’t like to be known after the fact.
I accepted an ARC of this book because I didn't know much about Martin Luther King, Jr. We may have studied him in school, and I've just forgotten, or maybe we didn't cover him in history class. Either way, I thought this would be a good opportunity to learn more about him.
This book was well written, and it is clear from the beginning that the author spent a lot of time researching his subject. I was immediately pulled into the life of a young MLK Jr. I learned a lot I didn't know, not only about MLK Jr. but also about the time period. I found it easy to read and very interesting.
My one issue with this book is the amount of detail. Detail isn't a bad thing necessarily, but I just found there to be too much to the point it took away from MLK Jr and his life. I am sure many people will love all of the details about the time period and the people in his life, but for me, at this moment in time, it was just too much.
All in all, this was a good book and one I am glad I spent the time reading. I think this would be a wonderful addition to the library of any history buff or for those who enjoy biographies.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for the advanced copy.
Lerone A. Martin writes with a rare combination of scholarly authority and emotional sensitivity. The research is clearly extensive, but the storytelling never feels dry or overly academic. Instead, the narrative flows naturally and keeps readers emotionally connected to King’s journey.
As someone who deeply enjoys American historical biographies, I found that Lerone A. Martin’s extensive research beautifully illuminates the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Backed by an impressive array of documentation and footnotes, the biography recounts King’s life from his youth onward, detailing the pivotal life experiences that ultimately led to his involvement in the Civil Rights Movement. Crucially, the book also explores the lives of King’s parents, showcasing the profound social and religious upbringing that shaped him into the leader he became.
Having previously held only a limited knowledge of King's early life, I found the deep dive into his family background, as well as the immense influence of his parents, church, and community, to be incredibly enlightening. Furthermore, the author doesn't water down the harsh realities and difficulties King faced growing up in the segregated South.
Because it is so dense with research, direct quotes, and deep historical context, it isn't always a breezy, smooth read. However, Young King is a thoroughly worthwhile one. The impact King made on American history should never be forgotten, making this biography a truly essential read.
Many thanks to Amistad and to NetGalley for this ARC for review. This is my honest opinion.