Lay that trumpet in our hands by Susan Carol McCarthy
Requirements: .ePUB reader, 295 KB
Overview: In the turbulent spring of 1951, central Florida became notoriously linked to a vicious series of Ku Klux Klan activities. The racial, religious, and political mix that populated Reesa McMahon’s childhood hometown of Mayflower that same year was, as her Northern-born father remarked, “the social equivalent of a Molotov cocktail.” The upheaval her family experiences in the coming-of-age novel Lay That Trumpet in Our Hands by Susan Carol McCarthy–which is based on actual events from her own life–abruptly ends Reesa’s girlish sense of security. When her friend Marvin Cully, a black orange-picker who works for her father, is killed by the local Opalakee Klan, she realizes how much her liberal family stands out in opposition to the men with white sheets and guns who, unmasked, served as the pillars of the local community. While making sense of Marvin’s death and slowly realizing the extent to which her fellow townsfolk brandish their racist attitudes, Reesa watches her own house become the unofficial center of the resistance. The author notes her arguably sensible reasons for fictionalizing her accounts, but the resulting story doesn’t move beyond the confines of a young girl’s mind. –Emily Russin –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Genre: Fiction > General Fiction/Classics
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