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Narrado por:
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JD Jackson
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De:
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Barbara Wright
One generation away from slavery, a thriving African American community—enfranchised and emancipated—suddenly and violently loses its freedom in turn of the century North Carolina when a group of local politicians stages the only successful coup d'etat in US history.
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Starred Review, School Library Journal, January 1, 2012:
“The expert blending of vivid historical details with the voice of a courageous, relatable hero makes this book shine.”
Starred Review, The Horn Book Magazine, January 1, 2012:
“Wright has taken a little-known event and brought it to vivid life, with a richly evoked setting of a town on the Cape Fear River, where a people not far from the days of slavery look forward to the promise of the twentieth century.”
Starred Review, Publishers Weekly, December 12, 2011:
“This thought-provoking novel and its memorable cast offer an unflinching and fresh take on race relations, injustice, and a fascinating, little-known chapter of history.”
Starred Review, Kirkus Reviews, November 15, 2011:
"Relying on historical records, Wright deftly combines real and fictional characters to produce an intimate story about the Wilmington riots to disenfranchise black citizens. An intensely moving, first-person narrative of a disturbing historical footnote told from the perspective of a very likable, credible young hero."
They must listen to
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Getting interested in the Civil War and Lincoln's assassination recently gave birth to curiosity about what life must have been like afterwards for freed slaves and freedmen. Though I really wanted a happier ending, of course, I wanted the truth more. It has made me very thoughtful about how peoples torn from their original homes, shipped to a completely new culture and treated inhumanely have survived, and done in fair part, well.I'd like to know how they have achieved this success, thus far.
The author does an excellent, no, outstanding job of weaving fictional characters into real events. As the blurb says, this town in North Carolina was successfully integrated
economically, culturally and socially to a positive extent, with even the critical element of
democracy, information, balanced with both black and white newspapers. But, of course,
the anger and hatred of losing the war and the economic dependency of slavery burnt
very hotly and deeply in many an otherwise "civil" Southern breast, so it just took a small
flame to set these feelings brightly alight, setting a whole section of the state back to the
ideological stone ages.
I'm glad to have read it. This kind of story telling teaches me more about history than I
can otherwise learn. Mere linear events are never divorced from people's feelings, their
human needs, their information and belief system, and the decisions they make that help or harm their survival.
A True, But Sad Story Come to Life & Remembrance
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great historical fiction for all ages, great read
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Surprised by content
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