Molly Walling

Molly Walling’s Followers (7)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
Towles ...
528 books | 104 friends

Stacey ...
726 books | 59 friends

Taryn
1,132 books | 270 friends

Sandy T...
760 books | 37 friends

Stewart...
604 books | 49 friends

Sarah L...
227 books | 79 friends

Ann Brown
308 books | 6 friends

Kimberl...
6 books | 47 friends

More friends…

Molly Walling

Goodreads Author


Website

Genre

Member Since
April 2014



Molly Walling is a writer and educator. She earned a BA in English from Converse College, an M.A. in Literature from East Tennessee State University and an MFA in Creative nonfiction from Goucher College. She is the author of Death in the Delta: Uncovering a Mississippi Family Secret, named a Willie Morris book in memoir and biography. Her second memoir was published in July, 2020: For Simon: A Journey into Truth and Reconciliation.
She has taught writing at Mars Hill University, University of North Carolina Asheville and for the Great Smokies Writing Program. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina.

Average rating: 3.73 · 64 ratings · 12 reviews · 3 distinct works
Death in the Delta: Uncover...

3.55 avg rating — 56 ratings — published 2012 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
For Simon: A Journey into T...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 8 ratings3 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Death in the Delta: Uncover...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
Rate this book
Clear rating

* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Death in the Delt...
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
Quotes by Molly Walling  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“not one of them ever looked into the eyes of a black man or woman and saw a human being deserving of respect, fairness, or the right to the same freedoms, let alone the consideration, due to a brother or sister of the larger family of humanity.”
Molly Walling, Death in the Delta: Uncovering a Mississippi Family Secret

“Governor Fielding Wright’s radio address to the “Negroes of Mississippi.” His speech was aired eighteen months after the shooting in Anguilla. He was a Sharkey County native and a lawyer, who might have represented my father. But the reason this article jumped out of the library files and into my hands was the fact that Dad was then the editor of the Deer Creek Pilot, and he was a press agent for Governor Wright, who said: This morning I am speaking primarily to the negro citizens of Mississippi … We are living in troublous times and it is vital and essential that we maintain and preserve the harmonious and traditional relationship which has existed in this state between the white and colored races. It is a matter of common knowledge to all of you who have taken an interest in public affairs that in my inaugural address as governor some four months ago, I took specific issue with certain legislative proposals then being made by President Truman … These proposals of President Truman are concerned with the enactment of certain laws embraced within the popular term of “Civil Rights.” … [O]ur opposition to such legislation is that it is a definite, deliberate and outright invasion of the rights of the states to control their own affairs and meet their own duties and responsibilities. This same radical group pressing this particular proposal is also seeking to abolish separate schools in the South, separate cars on trains, separate seats in the picture shows, and every other form of physical separation between races. Another recommendation made by the President, and one of the main objectives of the many associations claiming to represent the negroes of this nation, is the abolition of segregation. White people of Mississippi and the Southland will not tolerate such a step. The good negro does not want it. The wise of both races recognize the absolute necessity of segregation. With all of this in mind, and with all frankness, as governor of your state, I must tell you that regardless of any recommendation of President Truman, despite any law passed by Congress, and no matter what is said to you by the many associations claiming to represent you, there will continue to be segregation between the races in Mississippi. If any of you have become so deluded as to want to enter our white schools, patronize our hotels and cafes, enjoy social equality with the whites, then true kindness and true sympathy requires me to advise you to make your homes in some state other than Mississippi.”
Molly Walling, Death in the Delta: Uncovering a Mississippi Family Secret

Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
The Seasonal Read...: This topic has been closed to new comments. Winter 2014 Completed Tasks: Do Not Delete Posts 4134 772 Mar 11, 2015 04:43AM  
109784 GOOD REVIEWS — 8603 members — last activity Jan 06, 2026 02:08PM
This Group is only for authors who are looking for reviews and Reviewers who love to read books and share their reviews.
No comments have been added yet.