
Keep A'Livin'
Kathya Alexander
(Author)Description
"Kathya Alexander triumphs in bringing the complexities of the civil rights era to life, complete with its injustices, anger, grief and tragedies. This is a very important book for today, as the U.S. potentially again finds itself in the grip of the illusion that violence will ever lead to anything good." - The Bay Area Reporter
Grappling with grief, ancestral trauma, and a family, community, and society in flux, Mandy dares to dream of a future outside the limitations of racism and patriarchy.
In the small town of Uz, Arkansas, Mandy Anderson wakes up on July 4th, 1963, her mother's birthday, to the sweltering Southern heat, a pounding headache, and the distinct thumping of her mother, Belle, kneading biscuit dough. In the raw heat, only made worse by Belle's baking, Mandy questions why the white woman her mother works for wouldn't want to give Belle the day off for her birthday. So begins Mandy's journey of questioning the structures that define her world, a path that carries her through tragedy, mystical encounters, and her own spiritual and familial legacy.
Kathya Alexander's debut historical fiction novel-in-verse follows the fiercely passionate, dedicated, and cheeky Mandy as she comes of age during the height of the Civil Rights Movement of the 20th century. Twelve-year-old Mandy and her mother, Belle, experience the extraordinary events of the 1960s, finding strength, fearlessness, and faith along the way.
This beautifully lyrical novel explores the reality of activism as more than just a handful of speeches given at protests, the costs to those who dedicate themselves to activist work, and the passion that drives us ever onward to a better, more just future.
Product Details
Publisher | Aunt Lute Books |
Publish Date | April 11, 2024 |
Pages | 312 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781951874063 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.0 X 0.7 inches | 1.1 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
Keep A'Livin' is the earth-rattling, mind-rearranging story of a young woman named Mandy, her mother Belle, and their racial mix of ancestors. Set in 1960s Arkansas during one of the most difficult periods in our long-winding journey toward racial equity in the U.S., Mandy and Belle's lives are shaped by "fire and angels" as each matriarchal generation by backstory experiences extreme tragedy, which thrusts them into navigating a changed world. The book is a timely addition to the literary canon, providing a portal through which we are brought to our knees by what is so clearly wrong and not-so-clearly right about the story that is America. --Paula Coomer, author of Dove Creek and Somebody Should Have Scolded the Girl
To Alexander, storytelling is more than a way to entertain; it's a powerful tool for education, activism, and advocacy. Keep A'Livin' and BLACK TO MY ROOTS are just two of the many examples of how she uses her ability to connect experience to story to help educate others, especially those in younger generations, about the struggles and achievements of the past. Her storytelling honors the past while urging dialogue about how these issues still impact lives today. --Patheresa Wells, South Seattle Emerald
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