“Recent social justice protests have sparked a new awakening to right historical and contemporary wrongs. George Floyd’s murder on May 25, 2020, was a watershed moment recognizing systemic racism and how since the dawn of slavery, brutality continues to oppress Black lives” (“Author’s Note”).
Thank you @harperperennial for this gifted copy in exchange for an honest review! 📚 💕
The original book was published in 1997, and it has been reissued into this new edition with its publication date on May 4, 2021 to mark the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre in Oklahoma. As discussed in the author’s note, the Tulsa Race Massacre is not an event that is often discussed or taught in history classes. I personally have not heard about it until this book.
This book is set in 1921, and it is sickening that the narrative of a Black man being accused of a crime he didn’t commit, being targeted and profiled, and/or being murdered ever happened. And it is enraging that it is still going on today, with the most recent event of Daunte Wright being murdered by a police officer.
This is not an easy read, but I think it is necessary. It tells the fictional story, while including factual information about the Tulsa Race Massacre, of a Black man being wrongfully accused of rape, just because the color of his skin. It is eerily relevant to today’s world and it tells a story that is told far too often, one that should have never been/ never be told at all.
Synopsis:
Jewell Parker Rhodes tells the stories of Joe Samuels & Mary Keane in Tulsa during the 1920s.
Joe Samuels is a young, Black man who shines shoes for a living, with dreams of becoming a famous magician. Mary Keane is a motherless, young, white woman who works in the city’s elevators. Joe & Mary do not know each other, and their paths have never crossed until one day they are alone in an elevator. Remembering a horrific event that occurred earlier in the morning, Mary begins to scream. Joe flees, and the white folk in town assume he raped her. Despite Mary’s insistences that Joe did not touch her, the white men form a mob to find and murder Joe.