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Jacinda Townsend

Author of Saint Monkey

3+ Works 151 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Jacinda Townsend

Works by Jacinda Townsend

Saint Monkey (2014) 107 copies, 3 reviews
Mother Country: A Novel (2022) 27 copies, 2 reviews
Trigger Warning: A Novel (2025) 17 copies

Associated Works

Birthing Justice: Black Women, Pregnancy, and Childbirth (2015) — Contributor — 32 copies
Red Holler: Contemporary Appalachian Literature (2013) — Contributor — 16 copies, 1 review
Surreal South (2007) — Contributor — 12 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

7 reviews
There is much to learn here, in the midst of the Great Migration North. Audrey and Caroline are best friends growing up in Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, an inhospitable incubator for all but even more miserable for black residents. Audrey is a great pianist, like her late father, who joined the service to play music and ended up getting killed in Korea. Caroline has "good" red hair, but when her father murders her mother for seemingly no reason, she is left as caretaker for a younger sister and show more grandmother. The girls have adventures around town and know everything about what goes on in each small home. The author paints a vivid portrait of a struggling community mired in economic depression and all the baggage leftover from slavery and sharecropping. Her descriptions are so pictorial that the reader can feel the yearnings of the two girls to escape their surroundings and their sad destinies of cleaning houses for white women.

But coincidences and miracles do occur. Audrey's talent is discovered while she is playing at a funeral and she herself makes her own Great Move to Harlem and to the Apollo Theatre. Caroline seeks comfort amongst the men of Mt. Sterling and does not get trapped in a teenage pregnancy. Their stories converge in North Carolina, where Caroline finally accepts Audrey's invitation to join their band on the road at a gig. What follows is not tragic, but predictable.

This is a great moody book and reminded me of The Color Purple, with its jamming music and cast of women who are themselves cast down, but somehow rise.
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I went into reading this book blindly without any knowledge of what the book was about nor did I read any reviews.

The book deals with some heavy issues, trigger warnings. At times an uncomfortable read. The beginning was a difficult read due to my lack of knowledge of Northern Africa, the culture, places, names, etc. I grew a disdain for Shannon, a young Black woman from Kentucky, traveling with her boyfriend, Vladimir, a mechanical engineer that travels around the world for his career. show more Shannon is depressed, irresponsible, self-pitying, and drug-addicted, under the weight of student loans and medical debt, and infertility she feels entitled to take something that is not hers. Shannon and Vladimir’s decision to kidnap a child off the street and leave the country with very little resistance from the citizens, and the Morocco government was alarming. The story became more interesting as I followed Souria, a 14-year-old daughter of Mauritanian herders, who is sold off into sex slavery to pay her family's debts.

I wanted a happy ending for everyone in the book, especially Shannon and Souria, as there was a back and forth between mothers, biological and surrogate. How the ending would grant my wishes is what kept me reading. It was heartbreakingly sad,

The writing structure and prose was a difficult read for me, but it’s worth the push to get to the end. The storyline has a very interesting message and this is my first and only read by Jacinda Townsend. I will give her other books a go!
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Beautifully written but sad tale of two friends, Audrey and Caroline, who grow apart. The book is written in first person, alternating between the perspectives of each young woman, so that you can see their failures in understanding each other's intentions. While it took me a couple chapters to get into the rhythm of the dialogue and narrative (not a negative), I really enjoyed what emerged. The characters, both primary and secondary, were complex and lifelike. There were a lot of rich show more literary elements in this novel that left me thinking about the story long after I would close the book.

I received a copy from Goodreads Giveaways in exchange for my review.
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From the book jacket: Fourteen-year-old Audrey Martin, with her Poindexter glasses and her head humming the ¾ meter of gospel music, knows she’ll never get out of Kentucky – but when her fingers touch the piano keys, the whole church trembles. Her best friend, Caroline Wallace, daydreams about Hollywood stardom, but both girls feel destined to languish in a slow-moving stopover town in Montgomery County.

My reactions:
I’m about a generation behind these girls, but I was interested in a show more story set in the late 1950s – an era when I was first becoming acutely aware of popular music and could hardly wait to grow up and join my cousins dancing to Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Fats Domino records. Audrey and Caroline are in a similar hurry to grow up, to be done with school, and to go out into the world. They desperately want something MORE out of their lives than small town Mt Sterling, KY can give them.

When the book opens Audrey is reeling from the death of her father, in the Korean War. She and her mother live with her Grandpap, who adored his son, and who encourages Audrey to play the piano like her Daddy used to do. Her mother, lost in grief, tries to find solace in a bottle of bourbon. Caroline’s family is still intact; her father, Sonnyboy, has a steady job “down to the ice plant,” while her mother, Mauris, does alterations in the back room of the local department store. But both girls are loners. Neither one deemed pretty or popular, they stick together until ….

Townsend has the two girls take turns narrating, so that several chapters are told from Audrey’s point of view, followed by several chapters from Caroline’s point of view, then back to Audrey, etc. In this way, the reader gets more of the story than either of the girls, who go long stretches without talking to one another, despite their very close friendship as children.

I remember the pain when my best childhood friend seemed suddenly to have “outgrown” me; when our interests diverged and we were no longer exclusively one another’s confidante. My heart broke for both Audrey and Caroline as I witnessed their growing pains.

Despite being able to connect with these characters, at least in theory, I found this a very slow read. It took me 12 days to read the book. I did NOT dislike it, but it just never really captured my attention. Still, Townsend is a talented writer, and some of the scenes she paints are very vivid. I’d definitely read another book by her.
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Works
3
Also by
4
Members
151
Popularity
#137,934
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
5
ISBNs
12

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