Ben Crump Books In Order
Book links take you to Amazon. As an Amazon Associate I earn money from qualifying purchases.Publication Order of The Hustler's MBA Series Books
| The Hustler's MBA | (2024) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Standalone Novels
| Worse than a Lie | (2026) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
| Open Season | (2019) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Benjamin Crump
Benjamin Crump is a civil rights lawyer and author from the United States. He handles personal injury lawsuits, including cases where people have died because of someone else’s actions.
Many well known cases have had Crump as the lawyer. He has stood for the families of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and George Floyd. His clients have included the families of Breonna Taylor and Tyre Nichols. He has also represented people harmed by the water in Flint, Michigan. The estate of Henrietta Lacks and the estate of Malcolm X have had him as their attorney. He took on cases for almost 200 people at the Astroworld event in 2021. Crump also worked with people who sued Johnson & Johnson over their baby powder product. He runs his own law office in Tallahassee, Florida called Ben Crump Law.
Crump became the lawyer for the families of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and Jacob Blake in 2020. In 2021 he started representing a person in the car who was with Winston Boogie Smith and for Daunte Wright’s family. The protests about police treatment of Black people happened because of these cases and others like them. People have called him the top lawyer for Black America because of his work on these important cases.
Crump knows how to write in a way that connects with people. He shares information in his writing that teaches readers about what happened. His stories pull people in and keep them interested. He has a natural skill for telling true stories that matter.
Benjamin Crump keeps working on new cases all the time. He shows no signs of stopping his law practice anytime soon. More families will likely have him as their lawyer in the days ahead. His story as an advocate is still being written.
Early and Personal Life
Born on the 10th of October in 1969, Benjamin Crump grew up in North Carolina. He was born in a place called Lumberton, which sits close to an army base known as Fort Bragg. He was the oldest child in a big family with eight brothers and sisters. His grandmother helped raise him at home. His mother worked hard at a hotel and at a shoe factory. Crump later moved to Florida to live with his mother and her second husband.
Crump found his way to books and writing during these younger years. He saw how his stepfather used math to teach students every day. This got him thinking about the power of learning and sharing ideas. He started to enjoy reading more and more as he grew up. Writing became a way for him to express his thoughts clearly. These skills would follow him into his future work.
He went to college at Florida State University and stayed there for law school. He finished his criminal justice degree in 1992. Three years later he earned his law degree from the same school. He also joined a fraternity called Omega Psi Phi during this time. The group focuses on brotherhood and service to others. Crump remains a member of this organization for life.
Writing Career
Benjamin Crump wrote a book in 2019 called Open Season: Legalized Genocide of Colored People. A big publishing company called HarperCollins put it out for readers. The book looks at hard topics about race and the law in America.
Crump has also written many pieces for news places over the years. He wrote for Time magazine in 2015 and 2016 about police cases and what they mean. He had pieces in the HuffPost about Tupac Shakur and about Starbucks moments for Black people. He wrote for USA Today after Stephon Clark died. The Miami Herald ran his piece about stand your ground laws. CNN published his thoughts on civil rights goals for the new year. He keeps writing articles as cases come up as he has more to say.
Open Season
Ben Crump wrote the nonfiction book Open Season: Legalized Genocide of Colored People. The book came out on October 15, 2019. Amistad the publisher released the work.
Here Crump’s book presents a difficult reality. He explains how America uses bullets and prison sentences to legally hurt Black citizens. These events happen one by one so they do not draw much notice. The outcome slowly builds into something like genocide even though it is done in small pieces.
Crump watched unfair court practices while handling cases for Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown. He saw that the legal system mainly helps rich white men get fair treatment. His time in courtrooms taught him that being a Black man in America comes with real danger.
The book traces a harmful way of seeing colored people that goes back to slavery times. This thinking creates mass incarceration and blocks people from voting. It also causes unfair schools, medical care, jobs, housing and police treatment. These issues hide the steady damage done to people of color.
Open Season shares lessons from Crump’s legal work over the years. He wants Americans to treat everyone the same under the law. The book pushes readers to join the fight for equal justice for all.
Worse than a Lie
Ben Crump wrote a mystery legal thriller called Worse than a Lie. The book came out on February 17, 2026. Bantam published it as the first book in the Beau Lee Cooper series.
On the night America elected its first Black president in 2008, a Black former police officer named Hollis Montrose got shot ten times by four white men after a traffic stop near Chicago. He survived the attack but ended up in prison with a high bail amount as the police department told their own version of events. A lawyer named Beau Lee Cooper took the case wanting to find out if Hollis was targeted or just a random stop. Powerful people stood in his way as he searched for the truth with one innocent man waiting for help.
This book grabs the reader from the first page and does not let go. The story moves fast with a legal case that keeps people guessing until the end. Readers will find themselves caring about what happens to Hollis and the lawyer helping him. It is a solid choice for anyone who likes courtroom stories with heart.
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