What Happens When a School Board of Religious Zealots Will Lie for Jesus?
The intelligent design case in Dover, Penn., was the stuff of tabloid dreams: a community divided when a school board led by religious fundamentalists tried to bring creationism into the local biology curriculum. But look beneath the surface, and it was hardly the two-dimensional “science versus religion” narrative favored by the press. As Lauri Lebo, a local reporter who covered the trial, writes, the “‘Darwinism’-spouting teachers were preachers’ kids; the ‘atheist’ plaintiffs taught Sunday school; the ‘activist’ judge was a Bush-appointed Republican; and the journalists labeled ‘liars’ were willing to go to jail for the truth.” In her new book, The Devil in Dover: An Insider’s Story of Dogma v. Darwin in Small-Town America, Lebo writes of her journey through a familiar town made alien by a handful of school board members willing to, as Lebo puts it, “lie for Jesus.” Lebo closely follows the story of how a handful of fundamentalists, pushing to include the teaching of creationism in