Posts Tagged 'civil rights'

The Davenports: More Than This

Genre: Historical Fiction

In this continuation of The Davenports, the year is 1910 and everyone is busy trying to find their way in the world. Ruby is newly engaged and happy, despite the fact that she did not choose the man her parents (and she) thought she would marry. Her happiness is somewhat dampened, however, when some vicious rumors start spreading about her. Meanwhile, Olivia is missing her lawyer friend, Washington DeWight, but that hasn’t stopped her from trying to get involved in the community and help support causes like women’s suffrage. She is introduced to a lawyer at her father’s company and she knows they are trying to set her up, but there is something appealing about this lawyer that she cannot help but feel drawn to. Amy Rose is dealt a serious blow when her mentor suddenly dies and her daughter suddenly appears and kicks her out of the house she had been living in for several months. She is still able to open her salon, including a full hair care line, and everyone shows up to support her. Helen and John are desperate to take the family company into the new century by producing cars, but in order to do that they need to prove they are serious. So, they enlist the help of several people (including a famous race car driver) to create and race a car in a local race. Do they have what it takes to make this new leap? Can they all find ways to support their passions and dreams at a time when so many types of people were limited in society?

This sequel is just as compelling as the first and will no doubt please the readers who have been waiting. The characters are all unique and interesting in a way that makes it easy to keep track of what everyone is up to. The historical backdrop is so important to the story too, with race, gender, and socioeconomic issues always playing a part in everything around them. Many parallels can be drawn between what these characters were facing socially in 1910 and what issues still influence society today. Recommended for fans of the American Royals series.

Stamped by Jason Reynolds

Genre: Non-fiction

Number of Pages: 294

This non-fiction title is written as a non-history history book and starts back before the United States was even formed. Jason Reynolds took us through the major developments in this country regarding race, including strategies that were used both politically and socially to try and control the roles people played and the thought process they had regarding race. He really shows how the country’s thoughts and actions on race have been carefully sculpted by those people who had the power and control to do so. It shouldn’t be any surprise that money and power often controlled the events that transpired with race in our country. Reynolds does a nice job of explaining how the country came to be at the Black Lives Matters place we found ourselves in the summer of 2020. For anyone who has never studied the issue of race in the United States this book is very eye opening and encourages you to look at historical events with a different perspective. This book will stay with the reader long after reading it. Recommended.


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