Friday, September 10, 2010

Leaving Gee's Bend & Condolences


Condolences go to Pastor Marvin Sapp and family for losing their wife and mother, Dr MaLinda Sapp after a battle with colon cancer. My thoughts and prayers go to you at this time.
I must be about 22 books into my 30 book challenge and challenge it IS. with a library card in arrears, I have to read the books at the library in order to get anything done; At the same time, other issues pull me and but I'm trekking along on this. I must talk about one of the books well the last book I finished for the challenge. fellow Alabamian Irene Latham's Leaving Gee's Bend, which gives a good story about love and family in Depression era Alabama, which is geared towards teens, is also a great read for those who are familiar with the area(I found out that it's a 142 mile journey by car for me). while working at one job here in Mobile, I have met some who are related to folks there.
Ludelphia Bennett is ten years old; Her mother is pregnant again, and she fears the baby won't live. On top of that, the mother doesn't feel well, all hands are needed to do the sharecropping work and it worries Ludelphia. When her good friend Etta Mae Pettway comes home after working in Mobile for a time, she is branded a witch due to the fact that the baby left in her charge has died and she is blamed for it. So, she comes home just in time to help Ludelphia deliver the baby her mom was carrying but her mother was scared of Etta Mae due to the rumors running about her, and also she was delirious with fever as well. Seeing that no help can be rendered here, she decides to go to Camden, and ask the doctor to see if he could help her mother. Now, here's the thing. Depression era Alabama is not the place for a girl to be out and about;especially a young black girl. but with determination and grit, Ludelphia goes out and get help. She encounters once she gets over the river, a family who feeds her but then the lady who just lost her husband is mad about that and over the fact that he was kind hearted to the people of Gee's Bend and she takes the girl into town to try and sell her, but that don't stop Ludelphia from getting away from the lady and finding allies in the Doctor and his wife who feed, help her and the wife being good, helps give Ludelphia the medicine she needs for her mother to get better. On her way home, she encounters the lady who wants to sell her again, but inadvertently, she gets her home via the person who tried to warn her not to trust the woman who is now on her way to take everything from the people of Gee's Bend. along the way she encounters her brother and Etta Mae, whom she tells about the raid, and with barely enough time, she goes and divert the family from losing all of their things. Of course, the lady strips the whole commumity of their livelihood(this being a true occurrence) but thanks to Ludelphia writing a letter to the Red Cross asking for help for the people of Gee's Bend, they are soon helped by them and save the day.
Gee's Bend(official name-Boykin,AL) still exists and is in Wilcox County; for a while, it was hard to get around to Camden, which is the largest town for them, due to the ferry service being taken from them during the Civil Rights era; thankfully, it was revived over ten years ago and fully operational today. what I like about the area is that those ladies took a skill and did great business with it. It is not easy living in that part of Alabama. if you don't have a car, your stuck. poverty is rampant, and those that are there, are just surviving. I had to answer a statement made by a journalist who spoke on the low numbers in the area during an election. I had to let them know that transportation is everything there and if you don't have it, your through. It is hard to think that that may be the case, but yes it is. please check out the other books on Gee's Bend as well as their quilts.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Welcome September

I can't believe It has a month since I have done a blog. August was a bit busy because my youngest daughter, Dakota, left home to go to college at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College in Perkinston, Ms, where her beloved best friend Madariah is going. Good thing she went there because the first weekend, if it wasn't for Madariah, she would have starved. She was on the 5 day plan, but since then has since switched to the 7 day plan;(Most of the students go home on the Gulf Coast, but since she has no car, she has to stay there)also she was real ADAMANT about loans but knowing that things DO cost in college, she HAD to take out a loan, which she told me the day after I left her. I am real proud of her. but of course, I have to send her money down there, and still take her some food and supplies within the next couple of weeks. I also had to use Mom's secret credit card, and now have to pay her back(and if she was here, she'd be bugging me about it to the bone)and since the people I am working with is experiencing cash flow problems, the time is coming to make some changes. I have to get a better full time job. I have to pay Mom back, I also have Tierra who is in college, but is expecting a baby in February, so that tells the story, I gotta get on the good foot like the late JB said.
I am more than half way through my 30 book/90 day challenge. by reading 20 books so far. Reading more but got a good four weeks to finish up the thing. I have been blessed to read some great books, as well as finish some good ones. Mandela's Way by Richard Stengel was one I started but didn't finish and found quite interesting about the man we know as Nelson Mandela. I am also trying out books I didn't finish like Catrice Jackson's "Delicious" on living an authentic, positive life for yourself. She is such an inspiration. check out her FB pages.then Carol Mackey's "Sistergirl Devotions" dealing with on the job issues. loving it.as well as some more.