I had to read this book twice to really appreciate the writing since I was so caught up in the story. A never named, brilliant, but often hapless black author is on a book tour to promote his novel, Hell of a Book. Believed to be plagued by an overactive imagination, he struggles to account for the appearance of a young boy - so black he is called Soot - beside him in cab rides, in his hotel room, out of nowhere. Meanwhile, the lead story in the news of the day involves the death of a young black male - one of many victims of the senseless racist nature of today's society. How are these three individuals connected? Is it important that we know? Sometimes funny, sometimes intimate, it is mostly a meditation on what it means to be black and male in America. In an interview, Mott indicated that he kept waiting for someone to write the kind of book he thought needed to be written about the topic. When no one did, he decided to write a hell of a book.
Saturday, October 21, 2023
The Secret Book of Flora Lea by Patti Callahan Henry
Hazel and Flora Lea are just two of the many children sent into the English countryside to escape the London Blitz in WWII. As the older sister, Hazel takes her job of protector seriously but at the same time entertains Flora Lea with the imaginary world of Whisperwood where they can be heroes in the adventures Hazel creates. And then Flora Lea disappears. Believed to be drowned in the nearby Thames which they often referred to as a river of stars in their stories, Hazel is devastated. Twenty years later Hazel comes across a beautifully illustrated book entitled Whisperwood and the River of Stars. Believing this to be too much of a coincidence, Hazel embarks on a journey to see if her long lost sister could in fact be alive. There are quirky characters and a bit of a surprise in the end but mostly a warm, hopeful read.
Tuesday, October 3, 2023
The First Ladies by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
This is the story of the friendship between Eleanor Roosevelt, who would eventually be the First Lady of the USA, and Mary McLeod Bethune, whom Eleanor names as the First Lady of the Struggle. They met in 1927 at a formal luncheon hosted by Franklin Roosevelt's mother. When many of the white women in the room refused to sit down with Mrs. Bethune, Eleanor is awakened to the realities of being black in America. This story of their friendship continues through 1945 following President Roosevelt's death and the beginning of Dr. Bethune's career as special consultant to the US delegates preparing to sign into existence the United Nations. In between we see their very public friendship demanding a hard look at the absurdity of segregation, encouraging logical discourse to move the needle on inclusion to various New Deal programs as well as the military, and promoting integration at the highest level of government hoping to shine a light on the need of change everywhere. But it is also about two best friends sharing the hardest parts of their lives as they try to correct some of the worst of American social policy. It is historical FICTION so Benedict and Murray draw from their own intense conversations to give the conversations of these two very important women true voices. They were names I knew a little about from my pathetic knowledge of history but names that deserve so much more credit for our move toward a truly inclusive society.