A Publication of Humanities Tennessee

Toward the Setting Sun: John Ross, the Cherokees, and the Trail of Tears

Atlantic Monthly Press
416 pages
$26


“Hicks revisits U.S. treachery and deceit toward Native Americans in his study of John Ross, the Cherokee chief who for 20 years led his people in defense of their lands. As the population of the fledgling U.S. grew, so too did pressure on the Cherokees to quit their land. Foremost among the advocates of Cherokee removal was Andrew Jackson, who used every power at his command–including eventually the power of the presidency–to see Cherokee land settled by whites. Against this formidable foe stood an unlikely champion, trading post owner John Ross. Only a fraction Cherokee, Ross nevertheless felt a powerful connection to the people and their cause, journeying repeatedly to Washington to plead their case and gain some sort of protection from the depredations of settlers and overzealous politicians. Ultimately defeated, he turned to doing what he could to ease the brutality of the long, bitter, and–for many thousands of Cherokee–fatal march on foot into the West along what came to be called the Trail of Tears. Richly detailed and well-researched, the heartbreaking history unfolds like a political thriller with a deeply human side.”

Publishers Weekly

Toward the Setting Sun: John Ross, the Cherokees, and the Trail of Tears

Tours That Bind: Diaspora, Pilgrimage, and Israeli Birthright Tourism

NYU Press
304 pages
$35


“Drawing mainly on his own participant-observation experiences, Kelner situates the program in a context of political tourism, giving us new tools with which to understand the visceral, emotional and cognitive impacts on the participants. This provides a sophisticated lens through which to analyze what the Birthright program, and others like it, does, how it accomplishes its goals, what those goals are and why the mechanisms used may also limit its impact.”

–Harriet Hartman, from The Foreward

Tours That Bind: Diaspora, Pilgrimage, and Israeli Birthright Tourism

The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing

Broadway
224 pages
$14.99


“In interviews with 13 black writers including Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Nikki Giovanni, and Edwidge Danticat, Golden (Migrations of the Heart) celebrates the pleasure of reading and writing spliced with personal glimpses of the contributors (late reader, straight-D student, ex-prisoner, college professor, illiterate mother, bookstore-owning father) that reveal the extraordinary diversity in literary tastes and habits. Even as many of the writers mention reading the canonical Du Bois, Hughes, Morrison, Ellison, and Baldwin, others are drawn to Madame Bovary and Madeline, Catch-22 and Carlyle. Essayists testify to the inspiration of particular teachers, the encouragement of other writers (two mention Gwendolyn Brooks specifically), and most frequently parental enabling and support. Golden’s introduction is moving and often lyrical; her headnotes are succinct and helpful; her interviewer voice is muted, direct, and consistently directed toward letting the writer speak. ‘I tremble with anticipation each time I open a book,’ writes Golden. ‘I smile with satisfaction when I read the last page.’ Her readers will do the same.”

Publishers Weekly

The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing

Tell Me About Orchard Hollow: A Smoky Mountain Novel

Canterbury House Publishing
284 pages
$15.95


Tell Me about Orchard Hollow is the second in the Smoky Mountain Novel series. Stepp’s first installment was The Foster Girls. In Tell Me about Orchard Hollow, marital betrayal sends New Yorker Jenna Howell retreating to her friend’s mountain cabin in Townsend, Tennessee. She hopes for peace and quiet and time to think about the course her future should take, but soon she finds herself challenged by unexpected events and new friends. One of her neighbors is Boyce Hart, whom Jenna knows she has no right to find as attractive as she does. This upbeat contemporary romance is set against the backdrop of the picturesque Smoky Mountains.”

–From the Publisher

Tell Me About Orchard Hollow: A Smoky Mountain Novel

Stormy Weather: Middle-Class African American Marriages between the Two World Wars

University of North Carolina Press
240 pages
$35


“The so-called New Negroes of the period between World Wars I and II embodied a new sense of racial pride and upward mobility for the race. Many of them thought that relationships between spouses could be a crucial factor in realizing this dream. But there was little agreement about how spousal relationships should actually function in an ideal New Negro marriage. Shedding light on an often-overlooked aspect of African American social history, Anastasia Curwood explores the public and private negotiations over gender relationships inside marriage that consumed upwardly mobile black Americans between 1918 and 1942. Curwood uses private correspondence between spouses, including her own grandparents, and public writings from leading figures of the era to investigate African Americans’ deepest hopes within their private lives. She follows changes and conflicts in African American marital ideals–and demonstrates how those ideals sometimes clashed with reality. In the process, Curwood shows how New Negro marriages are an especially rich site for assessing the interactions of racial, class, and gender identities.”

–From the Publisher

Stormy Weather: Middle-Class African American Marriages between the Two World Wars

Sister Blackberry

Whiskey Creek Press
332 pages
$17.95


“Eighty-seven year old Viola Garland has secrets that have tormented her for over sixty years. She kept these secrets because she believed her family would be protected. When a skeleton is discovered at a Rayes County building site, the choice she made as a young woman threatens to come to light. She knows the lie has kept the family disjointed but she is sure the truth will destroy it. Set in 1936 rural Kentucky and Northern Ohio, Sister Blackberry is a story about women—friends, sisters, mothers, daughters and granddaughters—and how their relationships are affected by secrets and lies of the past. When the truth surfaces, these women learn things about themselves and the family matriarch that shake each woman’s idea of who she is and how she fits into the only family she’s ever known.”

–From the Publisher

Sister Blackberry

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