Sunday, May 22, 2011

May Book - The Kitchen House

Our current book is The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom.  It is historical fiction about an Irish girl who is orphaned and becomes an indentured servant, living and working alongside the house slaves in the kitchen house of a Virginia plantation during the late 1700’s, early 1800’s.  We will be meeting at Jen H.'s house on Thursday, May 26 at 7:30 p.m.

Check out Kathleen Grissom's website for more information about her and her book:  http://www.kathleengrissom.com/

Publishers Weekly Review:

Grissom’s unsentimental debut twists the conventions of the antebellum novel just enough to give readers an involving new perspective on what would otherwise be fairly stock material. Lavinia, an orphaned seven-year-old white indentured servant, arrives in 1791 to work in the kitchen house at Tall Oaks, a Tidewater, Va., tobacco plantation owned by Capt. James Pyke. Belle, the captain’s illegitimate half-white daughter who runs the kitchen house, shares narration duties, and the two distinctly different voices chronicle a troublesome 20 years: Lavinia becomes close to the slaves working the kitchen house, but she can’t fully fit in because of her race. At 17, she marries Marshall, the captain’s brutish son turned inept plantation master, and as Lavinia ingratiates herself into the family and the big house, racial tensions boil over into lynching, rape, arson, and murder. The plantation’s social order’s emphasis on violence, love, power, and corruption provides a trove of tension and grit, while the many nefarious doings will keep readers hooked to the twisted, yet hopeful, conclusion.