Monday, January 9, 2023
Moonrise Over New Jessup by Jamila Minnicks
MOONRISE OVER NEW JESSUP by Jamila Minnicks is a debut novel and Winner of the 2021 PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction
which is exciting, but I felt that the preview I saw needed further edits.
Minnicks sets the story in the late 1950s in a small Alabama town whose residents
are all Black. That means they have more flexibility, independence and
freedom (e. g., no “Colored” back entrances) than Black citizens who live
elsewhere, particularly in the rural South. That absence of fear is initially a
shock to Alice Young who ends up in New Jessup after having to flee an abusive
landlord in another small Alabama town. Over time and through the kindness of
New Jessup residents like the Pastor and local dressmaker, Alice comes to value
the quiet certitude which of her new life, even falling in love and getting
engaged. There is tension, though, when her boyfriend, Raymond, and his friends
impatiently embrace National Negro Advancement Society (NNAS) principles and
advocate for municipality rights for New Jessup. Agitators want to push for
full integration and town elders prefer to preserve the status quo. The text
felt repetitive and slow in places, but Minnicks ably illustrates the courage
which was needed to face opposition from multiple sides and to risk the loss of
current rights while fighting for equal privilege. Readers may appreciate a warning
due to use some offensive racial epithets.
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