Jump to content

Cane River (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cane River
AuthorLalita Tademy
Publication date
2001
ISBN0-446-67845-7

Cane River is a 2001 family saga by Lalita Tademy.[1] It was chosen as an Oprah's Book Club selection.

Beginning with her great-great-great-great grandmother, Elizabeth a slave owned by a Creole family, Lalita Tademy’s historical fiction novel chronicles four generations of strong, determined black women as they battle injustice to unite their family and forge success on their own terms. They are women whose lives begin in slavery, who weather the Civil War, and who grapple with contradictions of emancipation, Jim Crow, and the pre-Civil Rights South. The culture she explores, that of slaves who remained in bondage until after the American Civil War, bears some core similarities but radical dissimilarities to that of Cane River's Melrose-St. Augustine society, whose families had lived as free from the late Spanish period of Louisiana history.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Joanne M. Braxton (2004). Monuments of the Black Atlantic: Slavery and Memory. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 91. ISBN 978-3-8258-7230-4.