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Red River par Lalita Tademy
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Red River (édition 2007)

par Lalita Tademy (Auteur)

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6501935,891 (3.64)26
"The intertwining stories of two Louisiana families--three generations of African-American men--and their struggles to make a place for themselves in a country deeply divided in the aftermath of the Civil War and beyond"--Provided by publisher.
Membre:RonSchulz
Titre:Red River
Auteurs:Lalita Tademy (Auteur)
Info:Grand Central Publishing (2007), Edition: First Edition, 432 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, En cours de lecture, Liste de livres désirés, À lire, Lus mais non possédés, Favoris
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Red River par Lalita Tademy

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» Voir aussi les 26 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 19 (suivant | tout afficher)
Garum garš stāsts par ļoti skumju epizodi Dienvidu vēsturē. Bet tas arī viss. Atmiņā diez vai iespiedīsies tik pamatīgi kā autores pirmais darbs ( )
  Ilzezita | Feb 6, 2019 |
I loved Cane River, but had to struggle to get one third into this and finally quit. Maybe I was just in the mood for something with a bit more forward motion. ( )
  Thebrownbookloft | Jun 29, 2018 |
Bay area African American woman writing about post Civil War massacre of ascendent blacks in a county seat down river from Nachitoches, La. ( )
  clifforddham | Apr 24, 2015 |
n 1873 in the small southern town of Colfax, Louisiana, history tells us there was a riot. The Tademy family knows different. "1873. Wasn't no riot like they say. It was a massacre..." The blacks are newly free, just beginning life under Reconstruction, with all its promises of equity, the right to vote, to own property and, most importantly, to decide their own future as individuals. Federal Government troops are supposed to arrive to protect the rights of the colored people--but they are not yet on the scene.
Amazon summary: In one wretched day, white supremacists destroy all the optimism and bright promise by taking Colfax back in an ugly and violent manner. The tragedy begins with the two sides: the white Democrats of Montgomery and the colored and white Republicans of Colfax in the courthouse, finally meeting face to face to discuss their differences. Then, a group of white thugs kills a colored man who was not involved in the courthouse struggle. He was home minding his business and the ugliness came and found him.

The confrontation that follows results in the death of more than 100 black men, killed by white supremacists bent on denying them their voting rights and keeping in office those who uphold the status quo prior to the Civil War. The massacre is only the beginning of Tademy's story. Using reliable sources wherever they may be found, she tells the hard and proud story of Sam Tademy, Israel Smith and their families as they fight their way back from the massacre. They get a foothold in Colfax, finally starting a school, owning land and businesses and becoming full-fledged citizens, as they were meant to be. ( )
  dalzan | Oct 13, 2014 |
“Red River” is an amazing fictionalized account of an African-American family from the tumultuous time of Reconstruction into the late 1930s. Tademy does an incredible job of portraying the raw emotions and experiences that encompass this tragic period of American history. A follow up to previous novel, ”Cane River”, she guides through her family’s generations with their accomplishments, tragedies, struggles and successes. Her use of regional language and descriptions take you back in time. With scattered pictures and copies of documents you come to realize that though this is a novel it is based on fact. It will horrify you, make you cry, make you cheer them on, give you hope and strength and you will admire the fortitude of the people who were able to change society. ( )
  JEB5 | Oct 30, 2013 |
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For Nathan Green Tademy, Jr. Daddy, I owe you.
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Come closer. This is not a story to go down easy, and the backwash still got hold of us today.
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Did we not march? Did we not march to the polls anyhow, one hundred black men here in Colfax, in 1868, cast our vote one after the other for the party of Lincoln, the Republican Party?
All you people trying to stay in the middle. There ain’t no middle. Ask the White League and the Democrats, turning everything into white against black.
Jackson Tademy has grown into manhood the way a child grows into hand-me-down clothes, at first straining to fill out the cloth, but by and by outstripping the limitations of the garment. His growth spurts were late, and when they came, each gave him hope that he had the potential to catch up to the height, if not the stature, of his older brother.
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