highly recommend it to fans of 60s and 70s soul and rock & roll. It dragged in a few places, but overall a very good book.
Our Friends of the Library group had their annual meeting recently and the featured speaker was a writer from Georgia who grew up in the community where I live. She has a new YA book which I am now reading.
Mignon F. Ballard, No Word For Goodbye.
From amazon: In the autumn of 1831, feeling as though her heart and stomach had switched places, eleven year old Nell Webb travels from her home in the small village of Athens, Georgia, to the Cherokee capital of New Echota in the northern end of the state.
Because of family circumstances, it has become necessary for her to live for a time with her uncle, a printer there, and his Cherokee wife, and to attend school with the local children.
Instead of the expected teepees and mud huts, Nell is surprised to find a wide main street leading through a town square bordered by neat frame buildings, not unlike those in her hometown.
Homesick and resentful, Nells friendship and adventures with her classmate, Callie, and the kindness of her uncle, aunt, and others lead her not only to a growing understanding, but respect and affection for the people she once considered primitive. As the grim threat of removal looms closer, she shares the sadness and alarm at the injustice that her friends might be forced to leave the land
they love.
This author is a very witty, charming, funny woman, who did her research on this project at New Echota State Historic Site which is located near where I live. She has also written a couple of cozy mystery series. If I recall correctly, someone here in this group was looking for a new series of cozy mysteries.
Thanks for the weekly thread, hermetic. I love the Japanese Art library you posted. What a gorgeous space.