The more time Florence spends in Shake Rag, the more she recognizes how completely race divides her town, and her story, far from ordinary, bears witness to the truth and brutality of her times-a truth brought to a shattering conclusion when Zenie's vibrant college-student niece, Eva Greene, arrives that fateful Mississippi summer.
Minrose Gwin's The Queen of Palmyra is an unforgettable evocation of a time and a place in America-a nuanced, gripping story of race and identity."
"The one who tells the story gets to say who's bad and who's good. Then the story rises up and puts on its clothes and goes out into the world."It took me some time to get into The Queen of Palmyra but once I was about a third of the way in there was no turning back. It saddened me that no one seemed to really care about Florence. She clings to anyone who shows her the slightest attention even when they obviously don't want her around. She helps Zenie with chores, helps her mom make cakes, idolizes Zenie's niece Eva, and tries hardest to make her daddy proud, but no one seems to want her around at all. She's shuffled from house to house every day, all in an agitated south. As time passes she realizes more and more the world she lives in and how it affects her, and she tries to be a better person.
If you liked The Help by Kathryn Stockett or The Sweetest Hallelujah by Elaine Hussey but want something a little more challenging, read this!
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