Four Score Speaker Series: Dr. Saladin Ambar

Date: 10/09/25
Location: Zoom

Join us on Thursday, October 9th, from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., for a conversation with author Dr. Saladin Ambar on his latest book, Murder on the Mississippi: The Shocking Crimes That Shaped Abraham Lincoln.

In Murder on the Mississippi, award-winning historian Saladin Ambar unearths the horrors that shaped a young Abraham Lincoln’s worldview, pushing him to find his political voice in one of the earliest and most pivotal speeches of his career—the Lyceum Address—in which we referenced each of these three crimes. Confronted by lawlessness, racial terror, and his own inner demons, Lincoln’s battle was political, deeply personal, and reflective of a nation already at war with itself.

Amid a string of murders that shocked the American frontier, Lincoln faced the devastating loss of his first love, crippling debt, a dangerous brush with illness, and a descent into suicidal despair. Yet from this darkness, he emerged with a renewed purpose—one that would define his leadership in the fight for democracy, human freedom, and the rule of law.

Through gripping storytelling and meticulous research, Murder on the Mississippi sheds new light on Lincoln’s transformation from a struggling young legislator to a man ultimately willing to risk everything to save a nation from itself. The forces that shaped him then—violence, division, and the specter of tyranny—are forces we still reckon with today.

This is not just a story of Abraham Lincoln. It is a story of America.

Saladin Ambar is Professor of Political Science and Senior Scholar at the Center on the American Governor at Rutgers University’s Eagleton Institute of Politics. He is the winner of the Association of American Publishers’ PROSE Best Book Award in Government and Politics for Stars and Shadows: The Politics of Interracial Friendship from Jefferson to Obama, and his Malcolm X at Oxford Union: Racial Politics in a Global Era is in development for a feature film. He is Co-Director of the Democracy Committee for New Jersey’s Reparations Council and was a contributor for the Lincoln Presidential Foundation’s docuseries on the Lyceum Address. He hosts the podcast “This Moment in Democracy” and has been a fact-checker and contributor for the Smithsonian Channel, CNN’s Race for the White House, and PBS’s MetroFocus. He is the father of teenaged triplets and lives in Philadelphia.

Register HERE.