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Summary - The Kitchen House: By Kathleen Grissom

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The Kitchen House is the first book written by Kathleen Grissom. It is the coming-of-age story of Lavinia, a young woman who lives at Tall Oaks, a tobacco plantation in Virginia. It is a historical novel mostly presented in first-person from Lavinia’s point of view, although some chapters are narrated by other characters.

The setting is a tobacco plantation prior to The Civil War in the United States. Considering the historical aspect of Kitchen House, one of the best things about the book is how clearly the author describes life on a plantation and the events that happened there (both pleasant and, unfortunately, often unpleasant).
If you want to learn about life in the 1700s and how slaves lived on a Virginia tobacco plantation, narrated by realistic “voices” of people who lived there, then Kitchen House is the book for you. The book does contain many explicit scenes of violence and scenes of a sexual nature, which are not for everyone’s stomach. While learning about history is important for everyone, this story might not be the best choice for people who have an aversion to more explicit explanations, but for everyone who wants to know the kind of life the people really lived, this is a great book.







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23 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 10, 2017

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