The
beauty of this work is in its seamless shifts from the past to the
present and how we the reader are left to reflect on the connections. Melody is deeply conflicted about her mother, who
left her with her father and maternal grandparents, Sabe and Po’Boy
Simmons, so she could study at Oberlin and not be thwarted by a baby’s
demands.
This poignant tale of choices and their aftermath,
history and its legacy, will resonate with mothers and daughters. There
is pain and hope in equal parts. If trauma
is a cursed heirloom handed down through the decades, maybe love is the
cure passed upward from the young to the old.
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