
Aunt Sara's Wooden God
Condition: SECONDHAND
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Aunt Sara takes pride in both her sons, mixed-race William and his half-brother, Jim. While hard-working Jim remains at home to tend to the farm, William heads for the bright lights of Macon, ostensibly to study theology. But his cold, hard, and calculating nature steers William away from school and toward the low company of the city's gambling dens. Worse yet, his jealous rivalry with Jim for the affections of their childhood playmate leads William to a dreadful act of betrayal. "This is an authentic everyday story of thousands of little families below the Mason-Dixon line, bound to the soil by poverty and blackness, but living their enclosed lives always in the hope that someday some one of them may escape the family group and go on to higher things," noted Langston Hughes. In his Foreword to Mercedes Gilbert's 1938 novel of small-town rural life in the South, Hughes offered favorable comparisons to Jonah's Gourd Vine by Zora Neale Hurston and George Henderson's Ollie Miss. Decades later, the book remains an important document of African-American social history. AUTHOR: African-American writer and actress Mercedes Gilbert (1894 1952) performed on radio and in the movies and television. She frequently appeared on Broadway, most notably in the all-black cast of Tobacco Road. Aunt Sara's Wooden God is her only book-length work of fiction.
Author: Mercedes Gilbert
Format: Paperback, 272 pages, 140mm x 215mm, 325 g
Published: 2017, Dover Publications Inc., United States
Genre: General & Literary Fiction
Description
Aunt Sara takes pride in both her sons, mixed-race William and his half-brother, Jim. While hard-working Jim remains at home to tend to the farm, William heads for the bright lights of Macon, ostensibly to study theology. But his cold, hard, and calculating nature steers William away from school and toward the low company of the city's gambling dens. Worse yet, his jealous rivalry with Jim for the affections of their childhood playmate leads William to a dreadful act of betrayal. "This is an authentic everyday story of thousands of little families below the Mason-Dixon line, bound to the soil by poverty and blackness, but living their enclosed lives always in the hope that someday some one of them may escape the family group and go on to higher things," noted Langston Hughes. In his Foreword to Mercedes Gilbert's 1938 novel of small-town rural life in the South, Hughes offered favorable comparisons to Jonah's Gourd Vine by Zora Neale Hurston and George Henderson's Ollie Miss. Decades later, the book remains an important document of African-American social history. AUTHOR: African-American writer and actress Mercedes Gilbert (1894 1952) performed on radio and in the movies and television. She frequently appeared on Broadway, most notably in the all-black cast of Tobacco Road. Aunt Sara's Wooden God is her only book-length work of fiction.

Aunt Sara's Wooden God