<p>Thomas Sowell has an almost godlike status amongst conservative intellectuals. "It''s a scandal that economist Sowell has not been awarded the Nobel Prize," wrote a reviewer in <i>Forbes</i>. A profile in the <i>Wall Street Journal </i>described him as "one of America''s great sages." His writing on politics, economics, and social issues have prompted both contempt and praise. In <i>Maverick</i>, Jason Riley explores the life and ideas of Thomas Sowell, one of America''s most important Black intellectuals.<br><br>A bright student with a tumultuous home life, Sowell was admitted to one of New York''s most competitive high schools but dropped out at age 16. He left home a year later and moved into a shelter in the Bronx for homeless boys where he kept a knife under his pillow for protection. Years later, the G.I. bill enabled him to enroll in night school at Howard University and after his freshman year, he transferred to Harvard. By 1968, Sowell received his doctorate in economics fr