I
have been wanting to read Before We Were Yours for quite some time. I’ve been waiting for the holds to die down
at the library so I could select it for my book club. The holds were finally at a reasonable level
so I picked it for our March selection.
Before
We Were Yours is the type of book that you pick up and you just can’t stop
reading. It was an excellent novel that
is told in two time periods, present day and 1939. Both stories were equally intriguing.
The
historic 1939 story took place in a shanty boat on the Mississippi. The Foss family is tight knit and loves their
life on the river. Twelve-year-old Rill
is the oldest and keeps a watch over her family when her father takes her
mother to Memphis to the hospital during a difficult birth of twins. While they are gone, the police visit and
take the children to the Tennessee Children’s Home Society orphanage. The children think it is temporary, but they
soon realize that life at the orphanage is a horror and they may never see
their parents again. Will Rill be able
to keep her family together?
In
present day South Carolina, Avery Stafford is a successful lawyer and the
daughter of a Senator and prestigious political family. She is engaged and moving along on her family’s
predetermined path for life, when she stumbles across a mystery. She is visiting a nursing home for an event
and meets May Crandall who mistakes her for someone named “Fern.” May also has a picture that looks eerily like
Avery’s Grandma Judy. Grandma Judy is
suffering from Alzheimer’s and was recently put into a fancy assisted
living. Who is May Crandall and how does
she know Grandma Judy?
I
was riveted and distressed by this novel.
I loved the shanty boat lifestyle on the Mississippi. I didn’t even realize that this lifestyle
existed! On the other hand, I was horrified
to read how children were treated in the Tennessee Children’s Home Society
orphanage. I can’t imagine being a
parent and having your children taken from you because you were poor. It made me realize that my own grandparents
living on a farm during the depression could have been victims if they lived
further south. I think this novel will
give us plenty to talk about at book club this month.
Did you
enjoy Before We Were Yours? What was
your favorite part of the novel?
Favorite
Quote:
“The
reality is that his decisions for Grandma Judy are in no way political. We’re just like other families. Every available avenue is paved with guilt, lined
with pain, and pockmarked with shame.”
Overall,
Before We Were Yours is an excellent novel that looks into the fraught history
of the Tennessee Children’s Home Society Orphanage when Georgia Tann took
children from poor families and sold them to the rich. It is also a great look into families. What makes a family?
Book Source: Purchased at Costco.
Book Source: Purchased at Costco.
I did enjoy this book, and found it a very interesting read. It is surprising that anyone could think that this was ever okay.
ReplyDeleteI've also been interested in this book.
ReplyDeleteIt is surprising. I don't understand the motivation. I feel like it was pure greed, but it was also people just thinking kids belonged with rich people and not "trash." I keep thinking how my own poor grandparents could have been snatched if they lived further south.
ReplyDelete