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The Sacred Place by Daniel Black
The Sacred Place by Daniel   Black




The Sacred Place by Daniel Black

The clumsy, heavy dose of Christianity and rudimentary portrayal of racism will also limit appeal. ) stocks his novel with stereotypes-from the downtrodden blacks to the dumb, bigoted rednecks-who speak in phonetically rendered dialogue ("What we gon do?"). Unfortunately, Black ( They Tell Me of a Home Patriarch Jeremiah Johnson's pain and anger bring him to call a town meeting, and the town's blacks decide to stand up against generations of murders, lynchings, rapes and other violence. Though his sharecropping grandparents and aunt and uncle try desperately to protect him-his grandfather shoots and kills the men who come looking for the boy-Clement is abducted and his death is inevitable. Daniel Black is an author and professor of African American studies at Clark Atlanta University. Striding into a general store, he offends the white store clerk by not placing his nickel in her hand. Visiting from Chicago, 14-year-old Clement is unfamiliar with social customs of the tiny town of Money. While spending the summer of 1955 with relatives in Money, Miss., 14-year-old Chicago-raised Clement unleashes hell when he buys a root beer at the general store and refuses to place the nickel in the white female cashier's hand, leaving it instead on the counter. Widely hailed for its historical resonance, Daniel Blacks The Sacred Place is a powerful examination of racial tensions in 1955 Mississippi.






The Sacred Place by Daniel   Black