Booklist-Rezension
In her first novel, Barnett skillfully plumbs historical accounts of black American life in the Jim Crow era and weaves them into an engaging and enlightening family saga. The story centers on Ivoe Williams, born in east Texas in 1888, a precocious young girl who becomes obsessed with reading as a means of escaping her seemingly hopeless life. Encouraged by her mentor, Ona, Ivoe earns a scholarship to Willetson Collegiate and Normal Institute in Austin, where she studies printing, typesetting, literature, and history. After graduation, Ivoe is prevented from following her dream of writing for a newspaper in both her hometown and Kansas City, where she is turned down repeatedly owing to her race and her gender. She is joined in Kansas City by Ona, her teacher- become-lover and together, in 1918, they found the first female-run African American newspaper, Jam! On the Vine, which shines light on black achievement as well as detailing the systemic economic oppression and brutality rooted in racism, which was so prevalent then, only one generation removed from slavery.--Donovan, Deborah Copyright 2015 Booklist
Library Journal-Rezension
In this lively and thought-provoking coming-of-age tale inspired by the life of newspaperwoman and activist Ida B. Wells, Ivoe Williams shares Wells's passion for the printed word as she struggles during the Jim Crow era to establish the first African American press on the eve of 1919's Red Summer. VERDICT Strong supporting characters and enlightening writing brings history to life in a meaningful work of fiction that should be welcomed by readers of Alice Walker, Lalita Tademy, and Tayari Jones. (LJ 12/15/14) (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.