Leaving Pipe Shop: Memories of KinSteeped in the lively cadences of black speech and the art of storytelling, Leaving Pipe Shop is one woman's reclamation of her family's history and ultimately her own. Clear-eyed, yet with feeling and delicacy, Deborah E. McDowell offers this moving and textured meditation on the ties of kin and the claims of memory. More than a simple coming-of-age story, Leaving Pipe Shop is an evocation of growing up black in the South on the eve of the tumultuous sixties, a portrait of a culture in transition, of a Southern world in the throes of political and economic change. Here is the debut of a rich and powerful voice in American memoir. |
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Common terms and phrases
afternoon ain't Alabama asbestos asked Auntee Auntee's baby Baybro belly bands Bessemer Super Highway Birmingham Birmingham World blue Brittany called chifforobe church Crockett Daddy Frank Daddy's door dress Edie's eyes face Fred front Gina girls Grandma Edie grown folks hair hand head hear heard Hokey Pokey inside kitchen knew leave Lige living room look Loveman's Macedonia Mama's married Martha Faye Miss Cleo Miss Viola morning Mother Mother's house Mountain Brook never night Papa paper picture pink Pipe and Foundry Pipe Shop play porch pulled Reggie and Bumbiddle remember Reverend Lockhart side stay stood Sumter County Sunday Super Highway talk Tawanna tell thing Thornton Dial thought told took turned Tuscaloosa U.S. Pipe Uncle Jr Viola walked wear week Wiley woman women words
References to this book
Sex, Gender, and the Body: The Student Edition of What is a Woman? Toril Moi No preview available - 2005 |