Description
“ZORA WAS BOLD and honest like a bumblebee asking to nectar on springtime flowers, and loud and fearless like a bobcat,” says 12-year-old Carrie Brown, the narrator of the beautifully written ZORA AND ME: THE CURSED GROUND, by T.R. Simon…In “Zora and Me: The Cursed Ground,” the two girls learn about the enslaved history of some of their town’s inhabitants and the ongoing legacy of that bloody bondage. –The New York Times Book Review Raw depictions of slavery and its aftermath provide important context as the Eatonville community’s resilience is tested in the face of injustice. The voices of Zora, Carrie, Lucia, and their families and friends make for powerful, unflinching storytelling, worthy to bear the name of a writer Alice Walker called a “genius” of African-American literature. An extraordinary, richly imagined coming-of-age story about a young Zora Neale Hurston, the long, cruel reach of slavery, and the power of community. –Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Simon keeps the plot moving briskly and sustains suspense even as she folds in truly profound, timely, and important themes; and one of the things Zora and Carrie have learned by book’s end is that “history wasn’t something you read in a book. It was everything your life stood on.” –The Horn Book (starred review) This stunning sequel to Zora and Me is a fictionalized mystery based on Zora Neale Hurston’s childhood and includes a biography of Hurston as well as a timeline of her life. T.R. Simon’s writing does elegant justice to the grownup Hurston’s genius as a writer as well as to the character she apparently was as a child. –Shelf Awareness for Readers (starred review) The story of a city separated by 48 years and a war–1903 Eatonville and 1855 Westin, as Eatonville was formerly known–is told in alternating chapters. Simon offers keen insight into how the past affects the present, no matter how many years between them. A worthy purchase for all upper middle grade and middle school collections. –School Library Journal (starred review) A sequel to Zora and Me (2010), which Simon coauthored with Victoria Bond, this story pays tribute to writer and anthropologist Hurston and weaves the basics of her life (she grew up in Eatonville, set many of her stories there, and, as an anthropologist, studied hoodoo practices in the Caribbean and American South) into a plausible fiction…this makes a satisfying read for historical fiction buffs. –Booklist In this compelling sequel to Zora and Me (both stories fictionalize the childhood of literary great Zora Neale Hurston), two best friends unearth a town’s secret…Lucia’s story exerts the stronger pull in much of the novel, until the two worlds collide powerfully to highlight the “unfinished business of slavery” and reveal why the town is cursed ground. The result is a thought-provoking look at racially motivated violence and the enduring wounds of slavery. –Publishers Weekly Zora’s mischievous recklessness is a perfect foil for Carrie’s more circumspect nature, leading the girls into trouble that is more exciting than dangerous; Hurston herself might well approve of this imaginative riff on her childhood. –Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books This is a powerful story that will stick with readers. The novel is followed by a brief biography and timeline of Zora Neale Hurston’s career as an accomplished author. This stirring sequel to Zora and Me (Candlewick 2010) certainly stands on its own. –School Library Connection Slipping back and forth in time, layering stories and themes, the book is a lovely invocation of the idea that “however much we were each other’s future, we were irrevocably one another’s past.” It builds to a suspenseful climax: a standoff between white landowners and the town’s residents. –Plain Dealer Goose bumps, tears, smiles, and sighs: these were the rewards I took away from this exquisite read. I feel confident that my aunt Zora, the ‘Zora of the Cosmos, ‘ is quite delighted with the literary enchantment of T. R. Simon. –Lucy Hurston, niece of Zora Neale Hurston and author of Speak, So You Can Speak Again: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston A stunning work of imagination and a deeply necessary read. Young readers will not only learn about our history of slavery and Jim Crow; they will also ask themselves where they stand in American history. Zora and Me: The Cursed Ground will give rise to rich conversations about the positions we take in the unfinished business of our Civil War. –Michael Eric Dyson, New York Times best-selling author of Tears We Cannot Stop: A Sermon to White America Enough can’t be said about the goodness of this novel–and readers will yearn for more adventures of these two girls–both young and old readers alike. A solid piece of literature, worth buying! –YA Books Central (blog) T.R. Simon offers a fascinating exploration of the idea of collective memory and the long shadows cast by the evils of slavery in this second, marvelous, fictionalized
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