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Books
nominated for the 2000 Award
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Click here for the complete A-Z listing of nominated titles. |
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Book Information |
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The
Wake of the Wind by
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ISBN: 0385487045 (USA) |
Find out more about this author on these sites:
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The
Wake of the Wind
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books by this author:
Homemade Love |
The Wake of the Wind is J. California
Cooper's third novel, and her most penetrating look yet at the challenges
that generations of African-Americans have had to overcome in order
to carve out a home and future for themselves and their families. Set
in the South in the waning years of the Civil War, this is the dramatic
story of a remarkable heroine, Lifee, and her husband, Mor. When emancipation
finally comes to Texas, Mor, Lifee, and their family set out in search
of hope and a piece of land they can work and call their own. Miraculously,
they manage not only to survive, but to succeed - their crops grow,
their children thrive, they educate themselves and others. But the South
during the Reconstruction is not a place that takes kindly to the achievements
of former slaves, and as lynchings and injustice become a plague across
the region, time and time again they must make the anguished decision
to leave their land in search of a safer place. Land, however, is the
least of their worldly possessions. Lifee and Mor are the descendants
of a long and vital line. Having used their intelligence, strength,
and ingenuity to make their place in the new post-Civil War world, they
in turn pass those talents along to their children - the next generation
to surge forward, accomplishing more than their parents could even dream.At
once tragic and triumphant, this epic story that captures with extraordinary
authenticity the most important struggle of the last hundred years. Here's what the members of the Reading Group based at our Raheny branch library think of Wake of the Wind: This is a poignant story of a group of slaves
in the Southern States of America, going from African native to slave,
to freedmen, to landowner, to parents. About the year 1764 Suwaibu and
Kola were captured and brought as slaves to the Southern States of America.
In 1865, before emanicipation, their descendants Mor and Lifee meet
on a plantation and are forced to marry. Lifee had been brought up in
a family with a girl of her own age, though still a slave, she was educated
and had travelled with her mistress to New York and Europe. When the
mistress married she was afraid her husband would be attracted to Lifee
so she sold her. When the slaves were freed, Mor and Lifee with a group
of slaves set out to make a life for themselves. Lifee had been given
money, which she managed very cleverly and survived against all odds
to live to see her children go to college and own some land. The author
describes vividly the awful hopelessness of their lives as slaves and
the permanent fear when free of even the poorest whites, who burn their
homes and steal what little they have. It is told in the style of a
fairy tale. The patois was hard to take at times. Although I liked the
story it appeared longer than it actually was. |
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