The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman has sold over a million copies nationwide since its publication in 1971, making the fictional character of Miss Jane so real many people don't know she exists only in the imagination of Louisiana-born author Ernest J. Gaines. Miss Jane is 100 years old when she is interviewed by an area high school teacher looking to teach his students more about plantation society in the deep South. Her story is not only a vivid picture of the South before the dawn of the civil rights era, but also a story of one woman's survival against overwhelming odds. A stunning autobiography of a courageous woman who won her battles with grace and dignity. Born a slave and freed when she was ten, Jane leaves the plantation of her childhood and heads in the direction of Ohio in search of a white abolitionist who once befriended her. Accompanied by Ned, a young orphan, Jane struggles to get out of Louisiana. What happens in the years that follow is a tale of loss and heartache and renewed hope, imprinted on its aged teller's face like furrows in a russet field. Now, in the racial upheavals of the '60s, Miss Jane brings closure to one generation, and inspiration to the next.
The Souls of Black Folk (Unabridged)
W. E. B. Du Bois
audiobookSnowing in Greenwich Village : A Selection from the John Updike Audio Collection
John Updike
audiobookHow I Won A Nobel Prize
Julius Taranto
audiobookThe Odd Women
George Gissing
audiobookbookYour Lover Just Called : A Selection from the John Updike Audio Collection
John Updike
audiobookEden
Jim Crace
audiobookAn Island
Karen Jennings
audiobookCurtain Call
Anthony Quinn
audiobookTwo Moons
Thomas Mallon
audiobookA Station on the Path to Somewhere Better
Benjamin Wood
audiobookbookCrossing the Horizon
Laurie Notaro
audiobookViper's Dream
Jake Lamar
audiobook