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A
unique accomplishment, this is history never before told, an epic
novel of four generations of African-American women, a work based
on one family's actual meticulously researched past – and a book
with enormous implications for us all.
Lalita
Tademy had always been intensely interested in her family's
stories, especially ones about her great-grandmother Emily, a
formidable figure who died with her life's savings hidden in her
mattress. Probing deeper for her family's roots, Tademy soon found
herself swept up in an obsessive two-year odyssey – and leaving
her corporate career for the little Louisiana farming community of
Cane River.
It
was here, on a medium-sized Creole plantation owned by a family
named Derbanne, that author Lalita Tademy found her family's roots
– and the stories of four astonishing women who battled vast
injustices to create a legacy of hope and achievement. They were
women whose lives began in slavery, who weathered the Civil War,
and who grappled with the contradictions of emancipation through
the turbulent early years of the twentieth century. Through it
all, they fought to unite their family and forge success on their
own terms. Here amid small farmhouses and a tightly knit community
of French-speaking slaves, free people of color, and whites,
Tademy's great-great-great-great grandmother Elisabeth would bear
both a proud heritage and the yoke of slavery. Her youngest
daughter, Suzette, would be the first to discover the promise –
and heartbreak – of freedom. Suzette's strong-willed daughter
Philomene would use determination born of tragedy to reunite her
family and gain unheard-of economic independence. And Emily,
Philomene's spirited daughter, would fight to secure her
children's just due and preserve their future against dangerous
odds.
In
a novel that combines painstaking historical reconstruction with
unforgettable storytelling, Lalita Tademy presents an all too
rarely seen part of American history, complete with a provocative
portrayal of the complex, unspoken bonds between slaves and slave
owners. Most of all, she gives us the saga of real,
flesh-and-blood women making hard choices in the face of
unimaginable loss, securing their identity and independence in
order to face any obstacle, and inspiring all the generations to
come.
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