Going down South by Bonnie Glover

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: July 2008
  • 304pp
  • Sales Rank: 265,379

    Reader Rating: (9 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Escapism" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 2008
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 304pp
    • Sales Rank: 265,379

    Synopsis

    From the author of The Middle Sister comes a heartwarming tale of second chances and the unparalleled love between mothers and daughters.

    When fifteen-year-old Olivia Jean finds herself in the “family way,” her mother, Daisy, who has never been very maternal, springs into action. Daisy decides that Olivia Jean can’t stay in New York and whisks her away to her grandmother’s farm in Alabama to have the baby–even though Daisy and her mother, Birdie, have been estranged for years. When they arrive, Birdie lays down the law: Sure, her granddaughter can stay, but Daisy will have to stay as well. Though Daisy is furious, she has no choice.

    Now, under one little roof in the 1960s Deep South, three generations of spirited, proud women are forced to live together. One by one, they begin to lose their inhibitions and share their secrets. And as long-guarded truths emerge, a baby is born–a child with the power to turn these virtual strangers into a real, honest-to-goodness family.

    Praise for Going Down South:


    “Long live Olivia Jean, Daisy, and Birdie! These three daughters, mothers, and women are smart, feisty, and funny. Their stories will break your heart in the very best way. I absolutely loved Going Down South!”
    —Carleen Brice, author of Orange Mint and Honey

    Publishers Weekly

    Glover weaves the stories of three generations of African American women in a tale both familiar and surprising. In the early 1960s, 15-year-old Olivia Jean tells her parents she is pregnant, and her father, Turk, and mother, Daisy, decide to take Olivia to Daisy's mother's house in Cold Water Springs, Ala., to avoid a scandal in their Brooklyn neighborhood. The plan is for Daisy and Turk to return to Brooklyn and leave Olivia in the care of her grandmother, Birdie. But Birdie insists that Daisy remain as well. Daisy is deeply resentful of her mother, who ran a bootlegging operation in their dry county when Daisy was young, but she agrees to stay, and over the next few months, all three women learn about themselves. While the arc may seem familiar, Glover does an admirable job of avoiding cliché (as when Daisy and Birdie attempt to resolve their conflicts with a wrestling match) and provides readers with an absorbing setting and a complex family.
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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    Customer Reviews

    Going Down Southby jettaBN

    Reader Rating:
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    July 23, 2009: This book is an amazing read and I read it in less than a day, it was that good. Olivia Jean, Daisy, Birdie and Turk were all likable and at times misunderstood. But in a good way, being brought up in the south I often heard stories of things like this happening and reading about Olivia was so refreshing, I would recommend this book to the young adults as well as the more mature readers. It teaches in a humorous and non judgemental way the lessons some of us are still struggling with today. Pick up a copy today and see for yourself, you won't regret it. I loved it and so will you.

    I Also Recommend: The Middle Sister.

    Reviewed by hoopsielv for TeensReadToo.comby TeensReadToo

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    July 01, 2009: This is a story of women spanning three different generations.

    Olivia Jean is the apple of her daddy's eye and is praised by her mama for her good grades. Now, she's pregnant at fifteen.

    Her parents, Daisy and Turk, decide it's best for her to go down south and live with her grandma, Birdie, to hide their shame. Birdie isn't going to make it that easy, though. She gives them the ultimatum that Olivia Jean is welcome to stay, but only if Daisy stays, as well.

    Daisy hasn't been in contact with her mama for years and can't imagine how this will work. She figured this would be her chance to work on her relationship with Turk. After all, he doesn't come home for days at a time. What's he up to?

    These three women must learn to live together and be a family. All of them are harboring secrets that need to be revealed if they are ever going to learn to forgive, love, and move on with their lives. They must pull at their inner strengths in order to stand up for what's right and what they believe in.

    This endearing story is set in the 1960's and is full of moments that make the reader want to keep on reading. I found myself anxious to reach the ending just to see what happens. I highly recommend GOING DOWN SOUTH!


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