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      • Fiction
        February 2017

        One Good Mama Bone

        A Novel

        by Bren McClain

        Set in early 1950s rural South Carolina, One Good Mama Bone chronicles Sarah Creamer's quest to find her “mama bone,” after she is left to care for a boy who is the product of an affair between her husband and her best friend. McClain's writing is distinguished by a sophisticated and detailed portrayal of the day-to-day realities of rural poverty and an authentic sense of time and place that marks the best southern fiction. One Good Mama Bone explores the strengths and limitations of parental love, the healing power of the human-animal bond, and the ethical dilemmas of raising animals for food.

      • Fiction
        February 2016

        The Cigar Factory

        A Novel of Charleston

        by Michele Moore

        The Cigar Factory follows the parallel lives of family matriarchs working on segregated floors of the massive Charleston, South Carolina cigar factory, where white and black workers are divided and misinformed about the duties and treatment received by one another. While both white and black workers suffer in the harsh working conditions of the factory and both endure the sexual harassment of the foremen, segregation keeps them from recognizing their common plight until the Tobacco Workers Strike of 1945. Through the experience of a brutal picket line, the two women come to realize how much they stand to gain by joining forces, creating a powerful moment in labor history that gives rise to the Civil Rights anthem, “We Shall Overcome.”

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