47 pages • 1 hour read
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“I grew up thinking of her as our Elsie, not as someone’s mother. She was the black woman who had cleaned my parents’ house once a week since 1975. She had worked for my grandparents for two decades before that. Until I was in high school, she was also the only black person I knew.”
This quote introduces the character of Elsie Lancaster as central to the narrative and shows the author’s limited exposure to nonwhite people. Part of Green’s story in the book is her own transformation from a sheltered and ignorant young person to a well-traveled, open-minded adult with a multiracial husband and daughters.
“Whenever I asked about the reason the white school existed, my mom said that her parents had been looking out for their children. But who had been looking out for the black children? And what had been the cost to them? What was the story I hadn’t been told?”
The last two questions of this quote get to the heart of the book: Does a community have a responsibility to serve all its children? And what are the consequences of failing to do so? The author tries to reveal the full, unvarnished truth about what happened in her hometown—and thereby answer these fundamental questions.
“Farmville is still the quiet community where I spent long summer afternoons floating in my parents’ pool. On the surface, it is a perfectly charming Southern place to grow up, a seemingly wholesome town to raise a family. That is, until you dive in.”
Early on, Green juxtaposes descriptions of her idyllic childhood town with stories of Farmville’s complex history and painful past.
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