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If you liked The House Girl, try these:
The Last List of Miss Judith Kratt
by Andrea Bobotis
Published Jul 2019
Read ReviewsSome bury their secrets close to home. Others scatter them to the wind and hope they land somewhere far away.
by Robin Oliveira
Published Feb 2019
Read ReviewsFrom the New York Times bestselling author of My Name Is Mary Sutter comes a rich and compelling historical novel about the disappearance of two young girls after a cataclysmic blizzard, and what happens when their fate is discovered.
by Joshilyn Jackson
Published May 2018
Read ReviewsWith empathy, grace, humor, and piercing insight, the author of gods in Alabama pens a powerful, emotionally resonant novel of the South that confronts the truth about privilege, family, and the distinctions between perception and reality - the stories we tell ourselves about our origins and who we really are.
by Susan Rivers
Published Nov 2017
Read ReviewsA love story, a story of racial divide, and a story of the South as it fell in the war, The Second Mrs. Hockaday reveals how this generation - and the next - began to see their world anew.
by Charlie Smith
Published Feb 2017
Read ReviewsA sweeping, eerily resonant epic of race and violence in the Jim Crow South: a lyrical and emotionally devastating masterpiece from Charlie Smith, whom the New York Public Library has said "may be America's most bewitching stylist alive."
by Sue Monk Kidd
Published May 2015
Read ReviewsThis exquisitely written novel is a triumph of storytelling that looks with unswerving eyes at a devastating wound in American history, through women whose struggles for liberation, empowerment, and expression will leave no reader unmoved.
by Kathryn Stockett
Published Apr 2011
Read ReviewsWinner of BookBrowse's 2009 Reader Awards. Three extraordinary women start a movement that forever changes a small town in 1960s Mississippi, and the way women mothers, daughters, caregivers, friends view one another. The Help is a timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don't.
by Lalita Tademy
Published Jan 2008
Read ReviewsThis is a story about men whose lives began in slavery, who weathered the Civil War; newly freed men who have to fight for their liberties, hoping the federal government will come to their aid. But after a deadly racial massacre, once-proud families are left to deal with the wreckage and find the strength to push on.
by Edward P. Jones
Published May 2004
Read ReviewsA black farmer, bootmaker and former slave becomes proprietor of his own plantation, as well as of his own slaves, in this ambitious, luminously written novel that ranges seamlessly between the past and future and back again to the present. Excerpt contains content exclusive to BookBrowse.
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