Green Doll: Mother America's Son

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Cultural Studies, African-American Studies, Fiction & Literature, Classics
Cover of the book Green Doll: Mother America's Son by Doug Power, AuthorHouse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Doug Power ISBN: 9781491820575
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: October 11, 2013
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Doug Power
ISBN: 9781491820575
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: October 11, 2013
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

Heres how it starts: Vardaman is chased by two older boys and he jumps into the elevator shaft and reaches for the steel cable and catches it, seven stories high, but his hands are slipping. He can barely hang on. The elevator is broken because the building is in Chicago, the Cabrini-Green projects, and because the older boys run the building no one wants to venture inside to fix things. The steel fibers rip into Vardamans fingers and he falls, bruised but alive, one more escape. Not everything fits a label. Vardaman is smart and he does well in second grade. His mother checks his assignments when she gets back from her day shift at the nursing home, and it is there, after work one day, that she meets the wealthy and white middle-aged son of one of the patients. He introduces himself, approaches her as shes bending over the engine of her car that wont start and offers to help, attracted to her youth and exotic beauty. She accepts his help, attracted to his polite scent of money and perhaps a path for her and her son out from the projects. And so begins their cautious but quickened dance of daring as Alexander expands his boundaries and Linda tests the limits of her own. And watching it all is Vardaman, confused by what his mother is doing, afraid of what the brothers will think of her being with a white man, and maybe taking it out on him, and all he wants is for it to be ended. This is a novel about three persons exploring who each one of them really is in their separate grips of age and race and money and where their innocence might reside and their happiness might be found.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Heres how it starts: Vardaman is chased by two older boys and he jumps into the elevator shaft and reaches for the steel cable and catches it, seven stories high, but his hands are slipping. He can barely hang on. The elevator is broken because the building is in Chicago, the Cabrini-Green projects, and because the older boys run the building no one wants to venture inside to fix things. The steel fibers rip into Vardamans fingers and he falls, bruised but alive, one more escape. Not everything fits a label. Vardaman is smart and he does well in second grade. His mother checks his assignments when she gets back from her day shift at the nursing home, and it is there, after work one day, that she meets the wealthy and white middle-aged son of one of the patients. He introduces himself, approaches her as shes bending over the engine of her car that wont start and offers to help, attracted to her youth and exotic beauty. She accepts his help, attracted to his polite scent of money and perhaps a path for her and her son out from the projects. And so begins their cautious but quickened dance of daring as Alexander expands his boundaries and Linda tests the limits of her own. And watching it all is Vardaman, confused by what his mother is doing, afraid of what the brothers will think of her being with a white man, and maybe taking it out on him, and all he wants is for it to be ended. This is a novel about three persons exploring who each one of them really is in their separate grips of age and race and money and where their innocence might reside and their happiness might be found.

More books from AuthorHouse

Cover of the book ...And the Kids: a Disorientation Guide for the College-Bound by Doug Power
Cover of the book A Nanny’S Day—The Professional Way! the Social Studies Book by Doug Power
Cover of the book Alone Outside the Walls by Doug Power
Cover of the book Hard as Granard by Doug Power
Cover of the book It’S Okay to Hurt by Doug Power
Cover of the book Eden's Edge by Doug Power
Cover of the book Yippee! It's Eid-Ul-Adha by Doug Power
Cover of the book Free Transport by Doug Power
Cover of the book Teddybears to Bombs by Doug Power
Cover of the book Another Day Another Time by Doug Power
Cover of the book The Sending Booth by Doug Power
Cover of the book Vampire Princess by Doug Power
Cover of the book Woman of Purpose by Doug Power
Cover of the book The Crepe Myrtle by Doug Power
Cover of the book Day of Reckoning by Doug Power
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy