So Many Choices, Sweet Georgia!
By Kristen on May 2, 2008 in 50 States 50 Books
So many choices, sweet Georgia!
Photo by Bob Jangendorf
How can I choose between Alice Walker, Flannery O’Connor, Olive Ann Burns, and Sue Monk Kidd…?
First, here is Melanie Jones’ choice:
Tayari Jones’ debut, Leaving Atlanta, is set during the 1979 Atlanta Child Murders, at which time a total of 29 black children were killed. Three kids tell their stories: Tasha, struggling daily to stay in favor with her friends, Rodney, branded as too soft and different to be accepted, and Octavia, whose dark skin earns her the nickname “Watusi” and makes her a pariah. The three struggle to comprehend their classmates’ disappearances while dealing with the everyday, from divorce and first crushes to unraveling what grown-ups mean by “the truth.”
Jones’ narrative voices are pitch-perfect. Tasha’s crush, Jashante, buys her M&Ms and bites into his chocolate at the same time as she does—and she wishes they could have “repeated their communication as many times as there were M&Ms in their little packages for as many packages as Jashante had dimes to buy.” Using this poignant innocence, Jones conveys the depth to which atrocity shaped and shook her community. At the forefront of the civil rights movement, Atlanta was dubbed “the city too busy to hate,” and children grew up with little knowledge of the lynchings Jim Crow imprinted into most of the South’s history.
Photo by atomicpuppy68Georgia was mythically portrayed as “the red clay” that clung to “inexpensive canvas sneakers” and storms of “growling thunder and purple zigzag lightning” that left the ground cold and hard as pottery. But when fears of “the man snatching you” enter the recess lexicon, that magical world is forever changed. Rodney knows that the policeman who comes to instruct the class on safety has nothing useful to share and has made them more fearful since “this man is all that stands between you … and early death.”
Jones’ novel is bittersweet—an evocation of childhood in her hometown and a reminder of how easily a community can be changed by hate.
I really want to choose The Color Purple by Alice Walker, but Cold Sassy Tree by Olive Ann Burns gets my nod.
Burns does such a wonderful job creating a sense of place — and her Southern voice resonates through the characters of Grampa, Will Tweedy, and Miss Love. Cold Sassy Tree is very Southern, very funny, and very alive — I liked it so much I taught it to sophomores for a few years.
If you haven’t checked this novel out yet, I recommend that you do! By the way, Atlanta just chose The Memory of Water as their city-wide book. My friend just loaned it to me last week — I’ll report back once I’ve read it…

Photo by weaselmcfee
Curious about the other states we’ve covered?
First, from Melanie Jones:
Alabama: To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee (check out my To Kill A Mockingbird Sample Kit!)
Michigan: The Virgin Suicides by Jeffery Eugenides
Alaska: The Man Who Swam With Beavers by Nancy Lord
Arizona: The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver
North Dakota: Peace Like a River by Leif Enger
Vermont: The Secret History by Donna Tartt
Hawaii: Heads by Harry by Lois-ann Yamanaka
And I went out on my own for…
Florida: Their Eyes Were Watching God by Nora Zeale Hurston
Minnesota: In the Lake of the Woods by Tim O’Brien
Wisconsin: When Madeline Was Young by Jane Hamilton
Louisiana: Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood by Rebecca Wells (Jones’ pick) and The Awakening by Kate Chopin (my pick)
Colorado: Plainsong by Kent Haruf
Maryland: Anything by Anne Tyler
Wondering where your state is? Coming soon… 50 States, 50 Books List
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