"Leaving Gee's Bend...is reminiscent of Wilder's Little House series." - We Love Quilting! blog
"In this powerful novel...the anguish of the characters is felt by the reader, but one also feels the warmth of the quilts used as a metaphor for life in this time and place." - National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) (September, 2010)
"authentic and memorable" - Booklist
"rural Alabama of 1932 is brought to life" - School Library Journal
"captivating... a tale that will stay with the reader forever" - Book Page
In Gee�s Bend, Alabama in 1932, 10-year-old Ludelphia�s mother nearly dies giving birth. Ludelphia takes
off downriver to find a doctor in the town of Camden, 40 miles away, and in her first journey away from
her tiny village, she encounters white people for the first time. The hardship of African American
sharecropper families is always present in this stirring historical debut, and so is the rich sense of
community in rough times, although that community does include sometimes malicious local gossip.
Inspired by her mama, Ludelphia stitches together a quilt that tells her story, and that intricate process of
quilt making sometimes becomes a too-heavy metaphor. Still, Ludelphia�s voice is authentic and
memorable, and Latham captures the tension of her dangerous journey and the racism she encounters when
a white, mentally disturbed landowner�s widow takes everything from the sharecroppers as repayment for
their debt. In a final note, Latham talks about the history of Gee�s Bend and its rich quilting traditions.
� Hazel Rochman
Ludelphia Bennet is a ten-year-old African American girl growing up in 1932 Gee�s Bend, Alabama. In this isolated area the families all work as sharecroppers, living below the poverty level. When her mother is sick with a cough and fever, Ludelphia goes to get the white doctor to help. Ludelphia learns of courage, love, loss, fear, discrimination, hope, and more as she travels through the white section, seeking assistance for her family. Ludelphia is identified as a witch by the very family she thought would help her, and it is the knowledge of white people fearing her that eventually enables Ludelphia to save Gee�s Bend. Although similar to other tales set in small towns, this is different in its focus on a female protagonist and witchcraft. The strong tale of hope and survival will encourage female readers to enjoy other well-known works such as Bud Not Buddy (Delacorte Press, 1999) and Sounder (Harper & Row, 1969). Recommended. Sara Rofofsky, Electronic Resources/Web Librarian, Queensborough Community College, Bayside New York
Grade 4-6-Blind in one eye and shouldering a fair share of work as part of a family of sharecroppers, 10-year-old Ludelphia Bennett is no stranger to hardship or determination. Though her small town of Gee's Bend is geographically isolated by the Alabama River, she sets off on her own to Camden, 40 miles away, to find a doctor for her sick mother. Constant throughout her arduous journey is a stitched-together fabric, and she both physically and mentally chronicles her experiences as she pieces a quilt together. This is the way Ludelphia tells her story, of seeing white people for the first time, of encountering kindness and hate, and it is also the way Latham pays homage to the community spirit that historically fostered a heritage of artisan quilt-makers. While there is a bit of a reliance on coincidence, what shines through is the characterization and sense of place. Rural Alabama of 1932 is brought to life, complete with characters' prejudices and superstitions that are eventually overcome thanks to Ludelphia's indomitable strength. Here is a story that is comforting and warm, just like the quilts that make Gee's Bend famous.
� Joanna K. Fabicon, Los Angeles Public Library
"I knew what she was saying was true. But tears came into my eyes again anyhow. Wasn't nothing I needed that wasn't right here in Gee's Bend. And wasn't a thing that could happen that I wasn't strong enough to get through." [ Read More ]