Daughter of My People: A Novel

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University of Georgia Press, 1998 - Fiction - 288 pages
A debut novel of love, blood, and southern honor

In this extraordinary, long-awaited debut novel, the acclaimed essayist James Kilgo has woven a richly textured and complex tale from the threads of actual events. Set in rural South Carolina in the early twentieth century, Daughter of My People is the story of the ties of land, blood, and honor that bind and threaten to destroy two families.

At the center of the story are two brothers. Hart and Tison Bonner, and their cousin Jennie Grant, the mixed-race woman one brother loves and the other dishonors. Theirs is a world in which dark passions lead to tragic consequences. The burden of understanding that promises redemption and victory over the destructive Forces of ignorance and prejudice rests on the shoulders of Jennie. A shadowy but prominent figure in the stories passed down to Kilgo, Jennie here is given her due. Her strength and dignity, the driving forces of this novel, shine through the generations with the glow of heirloom sterling.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
29
Section 3
33
Section 4
99
Section 5
115
Section 6
132
Section 7
161
Section 8
167
Section 9
189
Section 10
212
Section 11
232
Section 12
254
Section 13
286
Copyright

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About the author (1998)

James Kilgo is a professor of English at the University of Georgia in Athens.

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