Patrick D. Smith, award-winning author of A Land Remembered, Forever
Island, and other classic novels about Mississippi and Florida, wrote
The Beginning in the 1960s at the height of the Civil Rights movement.
He offered an inside perspective on its effect on the people, both
black and white, caught in the upheaval of the changing South. Now a
new generation of readers can reassess the times and the decisions of
those who lived through them. Midvale is an imaginary small town in
southern Mississippi in the 1960s. Life moves at a pace set by its
long, hot summers and dirt-poor economy. The African-Americans know
their place and pretty much keep to it in “the quarters," a
dilapidated section of town. The whites, mostly merchants and farmers,
know their place too, living quiet, family-oriented lives. A
reasonably friendly atmosphere prevails in this segregated society.
Then Washington begins passing new laws, and a current of unrest
ripples through town as a few blacks, for the first time, register to
vote. Angry segregationist Sim Hankins demands that Sheriff Ike
Thornton do something to stop it. Sheriff Thornton has his own ideas
of what should be done to improve race relations: rehabilitation of
“the quarters" with indoor bathrooms, new roofs and paint, and paved
streets. But his plan triggers violence between those who would keep
the old ways and those willing to make a beginning toward the new.
Then the outside world arrives in the form of two young white Civil
Rights workers determined to start a “freedom school." The resulting
violence and bloodshed carry the story to a climax not unlike the
1960s' newspaper headlines.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781561645695
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
336
Forfatter