![]() ![]() There are some clumsy moments in the prose, but Townsend captures both the girls’ relationship and the desperation of the small, black community in Appalachia. Back home, Caroline struggles to take care of her ailing grandmother and bring some money into the house. Rating details 453 ratings 94 reviews Fourteen-year-old Audrey Martin, with her Poindexter glasses and her head humming the 3/4 meter of gospel music, knows she’ll never get out of Kentuckybut when her fingers touch the piano keys, the whole church trembles. The freedom and energy of Harlem sing through Audrey as she trades her country sandals for stilettos and spends her evenings listening to legends like Thelonious Monk and Ethel Waters. They grow apart during high school, colliding occasionally, but Caroline is busy with boys and Audrey recedes into a quiet life of reading and playing piano for her grandfather, later finding work as a jazz musician in Harlem. They share adolescent angst and their wild dreams for the future, but when Caroline’s father brutally murders her mother, Audrey and Caroline’s friendship is changed in ways neither girl fully understands. ![]() As children, Audrey and Caroline are bound together by their unpopularity, and their friendship quickly deepens, as they buffer each other against the cruelties that their small world hurls at them. Townsend’s debut novel chronicles the lives of two black girls growing up in the dusty Appalachian mountains of Kentucky in the era of segregation. ![]()
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