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Mudbound (Book Review)

June 2, 2009, 5:16 pm

Always and Forever : Katie The Rose of Tralee
Always and Forever : Katie The Rose of Tralee

WINNER OF THE BELLWETHER PRIZE FOR FICTIONMudbound by Hillary Jordan (Book Review)

                This debut novel Mudbound has rightly won many literary awards and praises from literary critics. It is published by Windmill and its ISBN is 0099524686. The book begins with a grave scene and each character tells in their own voice the story of how they arrived at the pitiless burial of their father.  The farm Mudbound is situated in Delta in the US in 1946 at the end of World War 11 and deals with family dynamics and racism. Two heroes Jamie and Ronsel return from war with their own scars but face their own battles on homeland.  The two brothers in arms form a friendship based on mutual respect for fighting for their country.  But in a small and bigoted rural land the black man Ronsel is delegated to a boy and is segregated from the whites. The two ignore orders to stop mixing and there are terrible consequences. Both families’ lives are changed forever. “Sometimes it is necessary to do wrong, sometimes it is the only way to make things right.”There are sad and disturbing accounts of violence and racism but it needs to be said and said loudly to learn from past mistakes, we all are equal.   It is a sad recall of a time past of racialism and war and how it can have devastating and lasting harm on people. It is a sad but beautiful portrayal of many characters points of view white and black, male and female. Each in their own voice tell their own tale. I highly recommend this tale. Reviewed by Annette Dunlea author of Always and Forever and The Honey Trap.

Book Trailer : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-S3AFkuOrNk