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Loading... The Air Between Us: A Novelby Deborah Johnson
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Excellent book focused on race relationships in the Mississippi in 1967. When reading this book it is hard to imagine how far Americans have travelled in race relations. Interesting characters make up this book with a few twists and turns along the way. This fascinating story shares a look through the eyes of both races at the end of segregation in the south. After a slow start, the reader will soon become wrapped up in the lives of a white doctor and a black doctor and how their lives intertwine. The mystery surrounding the death of a poor white man magnifies this link. no reviews | add a review
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Revere, Mississippi, with its population of "20,000 and sinking," is not unlike most Southern towns in the 1960s. Blacks live on one side of town and whites on the other. The two rarely mix. Or so everyone believes. But the truth is brought to the forefront when Critter, who is only ten, black and barely tall enough to see over the dashboard, drives Billy Ray—wounded in a suspicious hunting accident—to the segregated Doctor's Hospital. Dr. Cooper Connelly, the town's most high-profile resident, assures Billy Ray's family he'll be fine. He dies, however, and most people assume it is just a typical hunting accident—until the sheriff orders an investigation.
Suddenly the connections between white and black are revealed to be deeper than anyone expects, which makes the town's struggle with integration that much more complicated and consuming. Dr. Connelly takes an unexpectedly progressive view toward integration; the esteemed Dr. Reese Jackson, who is so prominent that even Ebony has profiled him, tries to stay above the fray. At times, it seems the town's only distraction is the racially ambiguous Madame Melba, a fortune-teller and "voyeur" with a past.
With endearing, fully realized characters and a mystery that will keep readers guessing until the final page, The Air Between Us will keep you engrossed until the end.
(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 14:31:58 -0500)
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