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Smelling Herself

 

The story of childhood’s brazen hopes and hindrances

 

Smelling Herself  is told through the voice of Bernadine, a precocious eleven-year-old wordsmith. Being an African American girl and living in the West Oakland projects in 1964 is a vulnerable and scary affair. Bernadine is convinced that the solution to her predicament is to grow. But she soon discovers that growing up is more complicated than she expected.

 

Bernadine’s precarious sense of well-being begins to unravel when Jessie Mae, a girl not much older than she, moves into the apartment above hers and Bernadine discovers the girl is being abused. Bernadine makes it her mission to save Jessie Mae as though she’s saving herself and every other child who lives with constant threats, though the harder she tries the more her loved ones are put in danger.


 Smelling Herself  is imbued with Bernadine’s humor, intelligence, and kindred love, as it unflinchingly investigates—through the eyes of a quick-witted child—what it means to navigate dangerous times without fully understanding the world she lives in. It’s the story of childhood’s brazen hopes and hindrances.  

 

Available November 1, 2013

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                                                 Kindle  

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Extremely well written. There are a number of stories told in this book. The obvious one is about an 11 year old girl coming of age. We are also given a view into an urban black familyin the 60's. The dialogue is superb and the plot unfolds like it was written for a mystery (the subject of Ms. Grimes two previous novels). Definitely a "goodread"! 

Lawrence Kasparowitz

 

 

 


 

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