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| Jack Joseph Prather |
| Lanier Library on Chestnu... |
Tryon, NC 08/18/2009 Noon |
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To Love Mercy description:
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To Love Mercy confronts race and ethnicity in segregated Chicago in the late 1940s. The book follows two boys - one black, one white - lost in the city together and exploring with innocent enthusiasm while their families tear each other apart in fear.
Racial tensions thread through the novel and personal choices are made with a shattering clarity against the pressure of the city.
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| Cyndy Zoch, Reader Views: | “To Love Mercy” is an amazing story of race and religion set in late ‘40s Chicago. Mr. Joseph weaves a memorable tale of two young boys and what happens when their paths cross one fateful evening.
Sass, an 11 year old black boy, and Steve, a ten-year-old white boy, live only a few city blocks from each other. Their two lives are worlds apart until circumstances bring them together late one evening in a parking lot after a White Sox game. The confrontation that results causes one to be injured and the other to feel a sense of responsibility for the injuries. The boys spend an adventure-filled day together. Meanwhile, back at home their two families, brought together by a black woman who happens to know both boys, fight because of their prejudices and misconceptions.
The boys begin their day naively unaware of the differences between themselves, but are challenged and ridiculed every where they go for being “friends”. Unfortunately, it doesn’t take long before the boys are affected by the words being spoken around them. They struggle with their need to fit in with society and their genuine feelings for each other. Each family professes strong religious beliefs; one family is Pentecostal and the other Jewish. Each claims “To Love Mercy”, but when presented with a situation to demonstrate that belief, each fails miserably. Ironically, it is the attitude of their families that bring the two boys back together again.
Mr. Joseph’s novel is a joy to read. The book is written primarily from the viewpoint of one of the two boys. Their conversations are quite believable and extremely entertaining. The boys, not knowing how to be “politically correct”, speak their minds freely, questioning events and circumstances, yet neither one takes offense at the other. When Steve sees Sass’ home for the first time, he exclaims “Jeez. It’s so small.” Sass responds, “What you mean small? We got a bedroom ain’t we?”
The side story of the black maid, a friend to both of the boys, and her son provides a sobering insight into what life was like in the south during the early twentieth century for black people.
You need not have grown up in the ‘40s to enjoy this book. This realistic story contains a riveting storyline, excellent dialog and enough excitement to keep you turning the pages. That Mr. Joseph stayed true to history is evident from the wonderful quotes he includes at the end of the book. These quotes were obtained from excerpts of historical tapes and transcripts, and real interviews conducted by the author with people who actually lived in the Bronzeville area of Chicago during the 1940s and 1950s.
Buy this book and encourage your friends to buy it too. It makes an excellent selection for any book club or discussion group. I guarantee that you will find plenty to talk about! |
| Vanessa Bush, American Library Assn. BOOKLIST: | In 1940s Chicago, upon departing a White Sox game, Steve Feinberg and his family are accosted by a group of black youth hoping to frighten white patrons out of some change. When Steve's grandfather accidentally falls onto Jesse (aka Sass), the Feinbergs take the boy to the hospital and trigger an odd relationship. Steve reaches out to Sass to breach the gulf he senses between the races. But their friendship is complicated by social conventions and relationships between the families that the boys are hardly aware of: Sass' mother works for Steve's grandfather at the decaying movie theater located in the black community; a family friend from Sass' church, Dora, works for the Feinbergs, caring for their children. As the boys wander across the city, lost and in search of a treasured object, Steve's grandfather suspects the object was stolen that fateful night after the baseball game, and their families grapple with racial tensions, misunderstandings, and frustrations. Joseph conveys a complex tale of race relations primarily through the perspective of two young boys.
RECOMMENDED FOR YOUNG ADULT |
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Dear Self
A Year In The Life Of A Welfare Mother |
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By Richelene Mitchell and Foreword by Zaid Shakir
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