![]() Ten-year-old Joan, her sister and mother leave their father and drive to their mother’s ancestral home to live with their Aunt August. The novel opens with a journey to Memphis. ![]() The women push on, working, making ends meet, laughing, storytelling. ![]() Their men are gone: murdered, incarcerated or too damaged and violent to live with. Her women are vivid, formidable and funny, exposing the legacy of racial violence not just within the microcosm of family or the titular city, but nationally. In Memphis, Stringfellow deftly weaves the voices of four women over three generations. He was the first black homicide detective in Memphis, Tennessee and had served in an all-black army unit that helped liberate the children’s camp in Buchenwald. Her own grandfather was killed by white police officers when her mother was five years old. Stringfellow has reason to identify with Gianna. “i understand if you not ready to read it yet this book gon be right here whenever you want it.” “i wrote you a black fairy tale,” it begins. Tara M Stringfellow prefaces this ferocious and compassionate debut with a dedication to George Floyd’s daughter Gianna, who was six when her father was killed by a police officer on a Minneapolis street in 2020. ![]()
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