Mama Flora's Family : A Novel

by Alex Haley

Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Publication

Scribner (1998), Edition: First Edition, 400 pages

Description

In the tradition of "Roots" and "Queen, Mama Flora's Family" is a sweeping epic of contemporary American history, culled from the unpublished works of award-winning writer Alex Haley. It is the poignant story of three generations of an African-American family who start out as destitute sharecroppers in Tennessee. Mama Flora is the heart and strength of the family, shepherding her children through hard times after the murder of her husband by white landholders. She has passionate ambitions for her son Willie, but he dashes her dreams by abandoning his church-going roots and moving to Chicago. After fighting in the Second World War, he marries his childhood sweetheart and struggles to build a new urban life for his family. Flora's dreams are realized by Ruthana, her sister's child, whom Mama Flora adopts. Ruthana graduates from college, and as a social worker in Harlem, counsels underprivileged women. Through her love for the radical poet Ben, Ruthana begins to understand her heritage, and after a sojourn in Africa comes to a redemptive understanding of herself. In Chicago, Willie's twin son and daughter embrace Muslim mili… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member TheoClarke
Affirming story of an African American woman's experience of the journey from emancipation to integration over three generations. The characterisation is warmly sympathetic while communicating the injustice of so much of African American experience.

Awards

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

400 p.; 9.75 inches

ISBN

0684834715 / 9780684834719
Page: 0.7448 seconds