I am almost four years late in discovering this review by two scholars for whom I have the greatest respect: David C. Berliner and Gene V. Glass.
I was happy to read this review because Slaying Goliath had a checkered fate. It was published in mid-January 2020. I went on a book tour, starting in Seattle. By mid-February, I made my last stop in West Virginia, where I met with teachers and celebrated the two-year anniversary of their strike, which shut down every school in the state.
As I traveled, news emerged of a dangerous “flu” that was rapidly spreading. It was COVID; by mid-March, the country was shutting down. No one wanted to read about the fight to save public schools or about its heroes. The news shifted, as it should have, to the panicked response to COVID, to the deaths of good people, to the overwhelmed hospitals and their overworked staff.
To make matters worse, the New York Times Book Review published a very negative review by someone who admired the “education reform” movement that I criticized. I thought of writing a letter to the editor but quickly dropped the idea. I wrote and rewrote my response to the review in my head, but not on paper.
Then, again by happenstance, I discovered that Bob Shepherd had reviewed the review of my book in The New York Times. He said everything that I wish I could have said but didn’t. His review was balm for my soul. Shepherd lacerated the tone and substance of the review, calling it an “uniformed, vituperative, shallow, amateurish ‘review.’” Which it was. His review of the review was so powerful that I will post it next.
Then, a few weeks ago, I found this review by Berliner and Glass.
The review begins:

Reviewed by Gene V Glass and David C. Berliner Arizona State University, United States
They wrote:
In a Post-Truth era, one must consider the source.
In this case, the source is Diane Rose Silvers, the third of eight children of Walter Silverstein, a high school drop-out, and Ann Katz, a high school graduate. The Silvers were a middle-class Houston family, proprietors of a liquor store, and loyal supporters of FDR.
After graduation from San Jacinto High School, she enrolled in Wellesley College in September, 1956. Working as a “copy boy”for the Washington Post, Diane met Richard Ravitch, a lawyer working in the federal government and son of a prominent New York City family. They married on June 26,1960, in Houston, two weeks after Diane’s graduation from Wellesley. The couple settled in New York City, where Richard took employment in the family construction business. He eventually served as head of the Metropolitan Transit Authority and Lieutenant Governor in the 2000s, having been appointed by Democratic Governor David Paterson.

Diane bore three sons, two of whom survived to adulthood. Diane and Richard ended their 26-year marriage in 1986. She had not been idle. For a period starting in 1961, Diane was employed by The New Leader, a liberal, anti-communist journal. She later earned a PhD in history of education from Columbia in 1975 under the mentorship of Lawrence Cremin.
Diane was appointed to the office of Assistant Secretary of Education, in the Department of Education by George H. W. Bush and later by Bill Clinton. In 1997, Clinton appointed her to the National Assessment Governing Board (NAGB), on which she served until 2004.

Ravitch worked “… for many years in some of the nation’s leading conservative think tanks.
Read the full pdf here.

Wonderful review from two exceptionally brilliant and knowledgeable people. Thank you, Professors Glass and Berliner!
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It is unfortunate timing for the release of the book. Nevertheless, “Slaying Goliath” is great resource for teachers, parents and scholars. What we have found is that it is difficult to take down a wealthy hydra like giant that buys politicians to arm it with a defense system $$.
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I own Slaying Goliath, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, and Reign of Error. They form my three gospels on protecting, preserving, and improving public education in the face of unrelenting attacks by those who would love, and are working towards, destroying and dumping into the dustbin of history our public schools. Dr. Ravitch is my premier guru whom I follow and listen to; others are Jan Resseger, Derek Black, Jennifer Berkshire, and Jack Schneider, to name a few. Dr. Ravitch’s daily blogs keep me motivated and encouraged to stand up and speak out for public schools and all those who work to educate the next generation of Americans, when there are many, even in government, who are eager to sacrifice our public schools and teachers to the privatization movement in this nation.
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Awesome. And thank you.
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Much appreciated, Mr. Shepherd. I live in Colorado, home to over 260 charter schools, first introduced over 30 years ago! Now, three brave state legislators have introduced a charter schools accountability and transparency bill, and the pushback from hired lobbyists in the charter school industry has been fierce. Even our Democratic Gov. Polis, who founded a charter in 2004, has joined hands with Amer. Fed. for Children (funded by DeVos Family), Walton Family Foundation, and (Yes!) ALEC among the conservative extremists who want nothing to do with accountability and transparency.
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Wow! Thanks, Mr. Johnson, for the update, and keep us posted!!!
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Oh, and Bob is fine.
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Bob and Rick: Two thoughts:
First, whenever I hear about the rich thinking they are not accountable to the public for what they do with the public’s money, I wince and am automatically reminded of my mother saying to me that I needed a “comeuppance” when I took a “certain attitude.” I recognize it now as a thoughtless (mindless) arrogance.
Second, it could be reasonably argued that, since Citizens United,” the collective rich present a “clear and present danger” to this United States by such attitudes and the actions that flow from them . . . Is there such a thing as a democracy that is also an oligarchy? Or is an oligarchy just another word for a bunch of king and queen wannabees vying for unwarranted and illegitimate power over other people’s lives, from their false I-know-better perch made of shallow and careless self-interest?
I don’t know what history will say, if anything, about what’s going on here, but to me, it looks allot like Great Failure of Capitalism “wrapped in the flag” of an almost dead democracy. CBK
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Yeah. Looks that way to me, too.
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Ditto.
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Diane, have you considered running Amazon ADs to promote Slaying Goliath?
Amazon ADs has this option called a portfolio that allows authors or publishers to limit how much is spent each month on one book.
That portfolio may have hundreds of separate ads in it for one book, but if your monthly budget is $100 (if that is the set cap), the ADs stop running when the AD spending hits that number.
The three categories Slaying Goliath is listed under on Amazon are:
Those three best seller ranks for the three categories means Slaying Goliath is one of the top one hundred best sellers in each one.
If Vintage would drop the price at or below $9.99, Vintage and the author would earn more back than it is earning set at $10.99.
eBook Royalties from Amazon may be as high as 70%.
I failed to include the link to that page on Amazon because of WordPress’s block editor. I don’t like that block editor.
I can’t even delete what the block Editor did to that link. Anyway, Amazon allows authors to set up ads that focus on the categories meaning the ADS would end up being sent to readers that read books in those categories. We are also allowed to set up keyword ADs but that’s a lot of. work compared to setting up a cateogry AD.
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Thanks, Lloyd. I know nothing about this Amazon program.
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Hmmm, I have no idea what happened but it looks like the link showed up anyway even if the block editor says it blocked it.
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The Berliner-Glass review sparked a trip down memory lane for me. Dave Berliner was a brand new Asst Prof when I began my doctoral work at UMass Amherst in the late 60s, where the late great Dwight Allen had been hired to transform a former cow college into a world class ed school. Berliner was then, and remains, an inspiration for his willingness to stand up for what’s right. I even see him periodically when he visits Portland Oregon where I moved in 2010. As the decades proceeded, I encountered Diane during her federal adventure as well as Checker Finn, whom I debated at AERA on whether replication was possible. I had the research, having been the PI on one of the few empirical studies of federal stragegies for school improvement that showed that it was possible but difficult. Dave’s review with Gene Glass is a welcome reminder of Diane’s powerful book which lays out the challenge that is very much alive. Perhaps a reissue with a forward by Berliner would reawaken “old” Resisters and jumpstart cohorts of new ones. Much needed IMO. [Full disclosure: my non-profit published the book by UMass prof Ray Budde that introduced the concept of charter schools into the arena. Sadly, the profiteers demolished its original intent, just almost impossible to mount and maintain.]
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Thanks, David! I’m happy to report that David Berliner attends NPE conferences.
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