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My Confederate Kinfolk: A Twenty-First Century Freedwoman Discovers Her Roots »

Book cover image of My Confederate Kinfolk: A Twenty-First Century Freedwoman Discovers Her Roots by Thulani Davis

Authors: Thulani Davis
ISBN-13: 9780465015740, ISBN-10: 0465015743
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Basic Books
Date Published: January 2007
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Thulani Davis

Thulani Davis is a poet, novelist, journalist, playwright, and librettist. Among her work are two novels, 1959 and Maker of Saints; several plays, including Everybody’s Ruby, which premiered at the NY Shakespeare Public Festival, and the librettos for Amistad and Malcolm X. She is also the author of two collections of poetry and two PBS documentaries, and has published in numerous magazines and journals. She lives in New York City.

Book Synopsis

Beloved novelist and playwright Thulani Davis takes a journey through her ancestral history and finds tartan plaid, unlikely lovers, and Confederate soldiers

Publishers Weekly

Soon after former slave Chloe Curry began working as a cook in the Mississippi home of Will Campbell, a former slave-owner, she became pregnant with his child. "She stayed with Will Campbell the rest of his life. And he kept her in his home the rest of his life. With this fact in mind, I can only assume a genuine affection of some depth developed between these two people." In this family history, Chloe and Will's great-granddaughter tries to make sense of their relationship in the context of Reconstruction and its failures. Unfortunately, however, Chloe and Will's 19th-century story, with all of its insights into a larger American history, does not fully emerge until the middle of the book. Descriptions of the author's writer's block, her research difficulties and her anger about the neglect of African-American history bog down the early chapters. Yet Davis (Maker of Saints) succeeds in conveying the precarious position of blacks in the South after the Civil War and her final chapter on the great Mississippi flood of 1927, in which "the lives of blacks were harder hit than others," has eerie parallels with the post-hurricane flooding of New Orleans-just one example of how important it is to understand this period in our common past. (Jan) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Table of Contents

1Twenty-first century freedwoman : fitting two families into history1
2Silver Creek, Mississippi, ca. 1875 : Chole Tarrant Curry comes to work at the Campbell Plantation15
3Clay pots and a tiger's tooth (1850-1861) : where Chloe came from43
4Horses at the door (1852-1861) : where Will came from69
5Behind Confederate lines (1861-1863) : the scattered Campbells go to war95
6War from on the road (1863-1865) : fighting emancipation, black soldiers, and personal loss127
7"They still shoot Negroes" (1865-1868) : in Alabama and Mississippi after the war159
8Silver Creek (1868-1878) : Chloe leaves terror in Alabama for Mississippi195
9Colonel Campbell's constituents : the heroes and villains of a violent election227
10High water (1880-1932) : Chloe and Will and life in Yazoo239

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