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Dolen Perkins-Valdez

Autor(a) de Wench

5+ Works 2,762 Membros 142 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Dolen Perkins-Valdez

Obras de Dolen Perkins-Valdez

Wench (2010) 1,165 cópias
Balm (2015) — Autor — 895 cópias
Take My Hand (2022) 699 cópias
Balm: A Novel 2 cópias
Prends ma main (2023) 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

Behind the Scenes: or, Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House (1868) — Introdução, algumas edições567 cópias
We Wear the Mask: 15 True Stories of Passing in America (2017) — Contribuinte — 91 cópias
Stories from Suffragette City (2020) — Contribuinte — 87 cópias

Etiquetado

1850s (9) 1970s (14) 19th century (27) 2011 (11) 2022 (11) African American (41) African Americans (11) Alabama (20) audio (10) audiobook (9) book club (9) BOTM (9) Chicago (8) Civil War (12) Dolen Perkins-Valdez (8) ebook (18) eugenics (11) favorites (12) fiction (171) goodreads (17) historical (23) historical fiction (159) history (9) Kindle (10) library (15) literary fiction (8) medicine (8) novel (15) nurses (10) Ohio (31) own (11) owned (10) poverty (10) race (12) racism (16) read (23) slavery (79) to-read (395) wishlist (12) women (21)

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Resenhas

I've read so many reviews of this book, eulogising its quiet thoughtfulness. There is indeed much to admire. The messages of an elderly pastor to his small son, who will not perhaps remember him very well after his death, are touching, and a wonderful way for the reader to make contact with a particular time and way of life in America's recent past. Many descriptions are telling and memorable. Somehow, however, though I read to the end, I never really succumbed to the undoubted power of this narrative. But I feel the book may stay with me, and that it may be one of those texts I have to have two goes at to appreciate. I hope so. I've read so many entirely favourable reviews, that I feel my slight negativity makes me the loser.… (mais)
 
Marcado
Margaret09 | outras 26 resenhas | Apr 15, 2024 |
It took me a long time to read this book. Having finished it, I can say that it is beautiful and heartbreaking.
 
Marcado
pianistpalm91 | outras 26 resenhas | Apr 7, 2024 |
Digital audiobook narrated by Lauren J Daggett.

In 2016, Dr Civil Townsend, reflects on her time three decades previously when she worked with Montgomery (Alabama) Family Planning. In 1973, she was a nurse and hoping to help women take some control over their destinies. She was particularly involved with the Williams family, and horrified at how the two young daughters were treated.

Perkins-Valdez took inspiration from a shameful episode in America’s history, when poor, Black people were used as subjects for medical studies without their informed consent.

Additionally, Perkins-Valdez looks at the class distinctions between poor, rural Blacks and the wealthier professional Blacks. Civil belongs to this latter social class and she has to make a conscious effort to hide her judgment of the way her patients live. She behaves compassionately towards them and even risks her career to fight on their behalf, but she has never encountered these conditions and it is difficult for her to hide her reaction.

I was certainly aware of the syphilis study done at Tuskegee, but I was not aware of the studies and policies on birth control and sterilization perpetrated against women of color. Kudos to Perkins-Valdez for shining a light on these policies in our history.

Lauren J Daggett does a fine job of narrating the audiobook. I did get confused a few times when the storyline jumped from 2016 to 1973 and back again. But context usually made it clear in which era the story was taking place.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
BookConcierge | outras 31 resenhas | Feb 27, 2024 |
I'd had this book on my shelves for an AGE. Probably over a decade at least. But what finally pushed me to pick this up and read it was the Book Riot Podcast — it's a book the hosts often refer to, constantly recommend, and at some point they asked, if you're a long-time listener of this show and haven't read this book yet...?

Okay, fine, I said. I'll read it.

And as soon as I did... the John Brown connection? The Kansas connection? The evolution of theology as influenced by current events/generations? No, I, TOO now want to know how I went so long without reading this!

I LOVED this book. Ravenously loved it. I gifted copies to multiple people I know. I loved the period, the tone, the theology, the Kansas/Iowa, the John Brown (who appears only peripherally in this picture but LOOMS LARGE), the small town pasturage, the prairie, the small town.

Do I love it enough to read the rest of the books? I don't know. I think the parts I am obviously interested in have already been told. But still. A five-star read, easily jumps to the list of the books of my heart forever.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
greeniezona | outras 26 resenhas | Jan 28, 2024 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
5
Also by
3
Membros
2,762
Popularidade
#9,288
Avaliação
3.8
Resenhas
142
ISBNs
35
Idiomas
2
Favorito
1

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