Of Blood and Sweat is in all likelihood the book I would recommend for folks entirely uninitiated to the concept of the stolen power and stolen wealth Whites have in this country. It is a well-argued primer on the events of 1619 leading to the Compromise of 1877, but with occasional analogues to the present elaborated upon, or an occasional aside tying it to current political conflicts.
There's a wealth of material here: the origin of the police out of slave patrols, the arc from Reconstruction to the Compromise of 1877, the domestic slave trade, Black Jacks, the Civil War, railroads, and much more. Ford does this effectively with well-structured chapters concisely supporting his argument. It gives a very coherent survey of Black history also in its own right. It intersects with The Invention of the White Race, The Ledger and the Chain, Prisoners of the American Dream, and shares a publisher with Paula Giddings at Amistad Books, a publishing house I strongly recommend across the board.
There are, however, occasional dalliances into creative nonfiction that have varying degrees of effectiveness. At best, they serve as a didactic tool to clarify some trickier concepts (in many cases, the financial ones, and in some pervasive historical inaccuracies) and at worst just sound like third-person historical accounts auto-adjusted to be in first person. The dialogue is stilted - as to be expected - but there a few where I liked Ford's usage of the device and a few where it felt unnecessary and it diminished the momentum of the book.
Absolutely recommend this as a springboard and/or gateway into many facets of Black history, with each chapter being its own exploratory topic with plenty of other excellent literature available - Blackmon's Slavery By Another Name, and Reconstruction by Foner - and it does inspire one to learn more. Probably a five-star read for college students who want a clear, entertaining, and educational book that keeps things interesting, is quite provocative, settles a lot of accounts (e.g. the servitude-versus-slaves epoch), stops to explain things out, and so on. It's also an excellent opportunity to see all of the threads come together into a narrative arc specifically about the wealth and power stolen from Black people. A great read I'd recommend to just about anybody who isn't already in the throes of new scholarship on the topic.