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The Week's Most Talked About Book: Wench by Dolen Perkins-Valdez

Published on

Fiction
Amistad/Harper Collins
January 2010

I celebrated Black History Month by reading.

Visiting popular museums or attending local parades were not on my agenda. Instead, I just sat in my favorite chair with my favorite blanket pulled up to my chin. Surrounded by several shiny hardcovers, I savored the freedom to read.

You too can read with abandonment. Experience the pleasure that comes from turning the crisp pages of a well written book, and consider yourself fortunate.

Lizzie, Mawu, Sweet, and Reenie are not so fortunate in the debut novel “Wench,” by Dolen Perkins-Valdez. At the Tawawa House resort in the free territory of Ohio, books are just one of many temptations that separates blacks from whites and stirs more than a bit of controversy among slaves and free blacks.

Perkins-Valdez writes flawless, historical fiction that reveals the restricted lives of four memorable slave women at a resort where their white slavemasters, minus the piercing eyes of their jealous wives, stake claim to their female property.

This is no ordinary summer vacation. Despite their tiresome, unending duties, these four black mistresses form an unpenetrable bond. Will their delicate friendship stand the test of time? What besides captivity do these four unique women have in common?

Each carries a torch for freedom, a desire to learn to read, a desire to protect their children born of an often unpleasant union, and a strong craving to be loved, even if this affection comes from an unyielding master.

Perkins-Valdez further examines the stormy relationship between black mistresses and wives, and house slaves and field slaves. Both enlightening and disturbing, fact or fiction, these forced bonds are deeply rooted in humiliation.

Lizzie, named Elizabeth at birth, is not entitled to her given name. She bears two children, a boy and a girl, by her slavemaster Drayle. Nate and “Rabbit” are deemed more important and an asset to their white father. How far will this advantage take them? Awaiting the plight of the mistresses and their offspring stirs mixed emotions – anger, surprise, and dread.

So, brace yourself for one of the most enlightening and entertaining works of historical fiction ever published. You will savor every every punctuation, every word, every paragraph, every page.


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