4 books by black women from Philadelphia that describe struggle and joy in town of sisterly love

The 4 works described below, all written by black women from Philadelphia, appear in my latest anthology “A Black Philadelphia Reader: African American Writings on the City of Brotherly Love.” I’m a professor of English at Long Island University and have several anthologies of African-American and Afro-Caribbean authors and a group of writings about Coney Island. My latest book accommodates fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by Philadelphia writers from town's founding to the current day.

Despite the tremendous challenges that black Philadelphians have faced throughout history – including racial prejudice and gender inequality in Housing, public transportation, Training, Healthcare And Criminal justice – these 4 authors convey an unwavering belief in family and community and the hope that Philadelphia will fulfill its guarantees of equality to its black residents.

Although the stories here deal with black Philadelphians, I consider their messages and lessons are universal.

Cover of the book “Sweet Summer” with a photo of a vehicle on a country road

Berkeley Trade/Penguin Publishing Group

“Sweet Summer: Growing Up with and Without a Father” (1989)

In this bittersweet memory Bebe Moore Campbella bestselling novelist who died in 2006, tells a poignant coming-of-age story about growing up within the Sixties in a family separated by each divorce and geographical distance.

During the varsity yr, young Bebe lives in North Philadelphia and tries to live as much as the high expectations of her mother, grandmother, aunts and teachers. Although she knows that they love her very much, she longs for the more relaxed summers in North Carolina together with her father, who doesn’t let his wheelchair confinement limit his dreams.

In these two worlds, Bebe realizes that there may be multiple method to show love and that families can take many various forms. Although she longs for a united home, the young girl grows up with a robust sense of family and self, learning that no distance can truly separate people in the event that they love one another.

Book cover with black mother and baby

Penguin Random House

“The Price of a Child” (1995)

Lorene Cary is a renowned novelist, playwright, and memoirist. This historical novel tells the stirring story of an enslaved woman, Ginnie Pryor – later often called Mercer Gray – who wins freedom for herself and her two children with the assistance of abolitionists in Philadelphia in 1855.

Because Philadelphia was the next big city above the Mason-Dixon linewhich separates the north from the south, it was often the place where enslaved people experienced freedom for the primary timeHowever, Mercer realizes that her freedom is in danger because after the Escaped Slave Law In 1850 she was captured and brought back to the South.

She also feels a responsibility to assist others still trapped in slavery and to help the white abolitionist who was imprisoned in consequence of her escape. Most importantly, she must face the terrible price of her freedom: leaving her youngest child behind in Virginia, where he remains to be enslaved.

Mercer can never shake off the haunting memory of her missing child until she finally receives a present of cash that is sufficient to buy his freedom. Largely based on the true story of Jane Johnsonrecorded in William Stills “The Records of the Underground Railroad”, this novel was chosen as the primary selection for the city-wide reading program, One book, one Philadelphia, in 2003and it remains to be value reading today.

Book cover with two dancing black women and a black man

Harper Collins Publishers

“Tumbling” (1996)

Native of West Philadelphia Diane McKinney Whetstone has written several acclaimed novels. Her debut “tumbling“” is about within the Nineteen Forties and Fifties within the South Street and South Philadelphia areas.

The foremost characters – Noon, a God-fearing woman, and Herbie, her nightclub-loving husband – appear to be an unlikely pair. Despite their differences, nevertheless, they love one another. That love is strengthened when, on two separate occasions, with the support of their tight-knit community, they soak up abandoned little girls left on their doorsteps.

While the 2 girls develop a real sisterly bond as they grow up, the community is soon threatened by one other challenge: a municipal proposal to construct a highway through the center of the neighborhood. It's as much as Noon to prepare her neighbors to withstand this bureaucratic nightmare and keep the community together.

Book cover with wooden chair on wooden floor

Penguin Random House

“The Twelve Tribes of Hattie” (2012)

This novel by Native of Germantown Ayana Mathis was a variety for Oprah's Book Club 2.0It begins within the Nineteen Twenties and tells the story of young Hattie Shepherd, one in all many black Americans who left the South throughout the Great MigrationShe settled within the Germantown area of ​​Philadelphia and fulfilled the dream of many immigrants to construct a greater life for themselves and their families. Her optimism is reflected within the names of her first two children: Philadelphia and Jubilee.

But Hattie learns the hard way that the North isn’t any paradise. Her children die of disease and he or she becomes disillusioned. Hattie must adapt to her latest life: the bitter cold winters, racial segregation and grinding poverty. She misses the sense of community she had back home in Georgia. But her courage and determination enable her to beat these challenges while raising nine more children and a grandchild – and using the 2 dead children to found her 12 tribes. It is her descendants and Hattie who tell the stories, and so the novel stretches as much as 1980.

image credit : theconversation.com