Green Thursday : $b stories

Languageen
First published2025-11-25
RightsPublic domain in the USA.
Gutenberg ID#77332

Description

Green Thursday by Julia Peterkin is a collection of short stories written in the early 20th century. Set on a Southern plantation, it follows Black families whose daily lives are shaped by work, weather, faith, and folklore, rendered in lyrical description and rich dialect. Early tales center on figures like the indomitable Maum Hannah, the field hand Killdee, his wife Rose, and the orphaned girl Missie, tracing endurance, loss, and community ritual. The opening of the collection moves from a broad, vivid portrait of the plantation to intimate, character-driven episodes: in Ashes, Maum Hannah is told to leave her cabin for a newcomer’s house; taking a “sign” from God as ashes and fire, she burns the new house and then calmly confesses to the sheriff, who quietly lets her return home. In Green Thursday, Killdee breaks the taboo against working on Ascension Day to save his choked fields; a storm brings his mule colic and, while he struggles outside, his little daughter is fatally burned, after which he and Rose mourn as a new child is being born. In Missie, a ragged girl who brings fatwood chips for bread is taken in by Killdee and Rose; she is scrubbed, shorn of lice, and gently attaches herself to Killdee while learning house tasks. Meeting shows Missie’s first prayer meeting, where an old exhorter warns of death “the stranger,” elders pray fiercely, and the congregation shouts, mingling fear, comfort, and community. Mount Pleasant then sends Rose, Missie, and Maum Hannah by wagon to Sunday preaching, detailing dress, talk, and the slow dignity of arrival at the church. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Subjects

  • Short stories, American
  • African Americans -- Fiction
  • Plantation life -- Fiction
  • South Carolina -- Social life and customs -- Fiction
  • PS

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