The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois Book Cover

The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois


A Literary Fiction Novel


Subgenres:

  • Family Saga,
  • Multi-Generational,
  • Historical Fiction
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This book is for you if you're into...

  • Multi-generational sagas tracing Black American family histories
  • Stories exploring identity through ancestral voices and inherited trauma
  • Epic novels weaving personal journeys with the legacy of race in America

From Little Stack

Another Oprah Book Club choice, this ambitious debut novel from the poet Honorée Fanonne Jeffers is over 800 pages long but worth every single one of them!

Tracing the multiple generations of the Garfield family, the book depicts an African-American family, the Garfields, from the days before slavery and through to the present. The novel's protagonist is Ailey Pearl Garfield, torn between following tradition to become a doctor and chasing her dreams as a historian. Through her education and her family's story, she delves into her origins and their journeys from emancipation to civil rights and beyond.

Publisher Description

The 2020 NAACP Image Award-winning poet makes her fiction debut with this National Book Award-longlisted, magisterial epic—an intimate yet sweeping novel with all the luminescence and force of Homegoing; Sing, Unburied, Sing; and The Water Dancer—that chronicles the journey of one American family, from the centuries of the colonial slave trade through the Civil War to our own tumultuous era.

The great scholar, W. E. B. Du Bois, once wrote about the Problem of race in America, and what he called "Double Consciousness," a sensitivity that every African American possesses in order to survive. Since childhood, Ailey Pearl Garfield has understood Du Bois's words all too well. Bearing the names of two formidable Black Americans—the revered choreographer Alvin Ailey and her great grandmother Pearl, the descendant of enslaved Georgians and tenant farmers—Ailey carries Du Bois's Problem on her shoulders.

Ailey is reared in the north in the City but spends summers in the small Georgia town of Chicasetta, where her mother's family has lived since their ancestors arrived from Africa in bondage. From an early age, Ailey fights a battle for belonging that's made all the more difficult by a hovering trauma, as well as the whispers of women—her mother, Belle, her sister, Lydia, and a maternal line reaching back two centuries—that urge Ailey to succeed in their stead.

To come to terms with her own identity, Ailey embarks on a journey through her family's past, uncovering the shocking tales of generations of ancestors—Indigenous, Black, and white—in the deep South. In doing so Ailey must learn to embrace her full heritage, a legacy of oppression and resistance, bondage and independence, cruelty and resilience that is the story—and the song—of America itself.

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