Reviews

Walking Gentry Home: A Memoir of My Foremothers in Verse by Alora Young

karnaconverse's review against another edition

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family stories and coming of age


Young, 2021 Youth Poet Laureate for the Southern United States, explores the maternal side of her ancestry which she can name back to 1796. The 120 poems recognize each individual's transition from girlhood to womanhood—some who are dark- and some who are light-skinned— amid the societal constructs of the time period. In the final section, she tells her own story by acknowledging how she carries her ancestor's stories within her but also that "I am not just my mother's daughter." These words from one of the last poems in the book, "Athena and Ida," reveal that transformation.

As I write this, I have eight months and twenty-three days
before I'm old enough to vote in this country
I've got negative seventeen years three months and seven days
since your votes began affecting me.
They sat the meek shall inherit the earth,
but they inherit the laws and the wrongs as well.
The children are left when all is done
to rebuild the empires that fell.
We the people must contend that
there are laws we must amend
even when those in power try to bend and break us.
But when resolves start to shake we must resolve to stay
awake
because the things that tear us down are what awake us.



I enjoyed this unique structure for tracing family history and appreciate the depth of genealogical research undertaken.

2023 Des Moines Library Challenge. Bonus Read: April Poetry Month

randisworld's review against another edition

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hopeful inspiring tense fast-paced

5.0

Amazing! Wowza. 

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tisarod's review against another edition

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5.0

The author gets deep with this powerful book. It was an interesting and introspective book, with poetry that makes the reader consider the past, and it's relationship to the present.

aclopez6's review against another edition

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4.0

I'm impressed that someone so young was able to produce a work that will hopefully be read by their own family for generations to come. While some entries were repetitive and did not add to the overall memoir, this novel in verse had a lot to offer, and I could see this being offered to middle-grade, young adult, and adult audiences alike.

donnalisa's review

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

annebennett1957's review against another edition

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4.0

Alora Young traces her lineage back to a slave and a slave owner. Each of her foremothers have stories and through researching her family has found information of each of them. She writes poems to honor these mothers and chronicles her family's curse of women getting pregnant and married too young. It is a tough but necessary read.

cadoca's review

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challenging emotional hopeful inspiring sad fast-paced

3.5

antonique_reads's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.0

aibautista21's review against another edition

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hopeful inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.75

carlacarov's review against another edition

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emotional

3.25