Dimensions
135 x 215 x 19mm
Banes, Mississippi, 1938. The Catfish creek separates the Patch from the town, black from white. These words and their prejudices are hauntingly evoked in the rich accents of the American South. Cinder is a woman who belongs to neither, her beauty marking her out as different.
Time passes slowly, and the inhabitants of Banes follow the same daily rhythm as they have done for years. Shorty sweeps up in Mister Macky's store, then drinks his wages at LeRoy's bar, men sit spitting outside the Rosey Gray, old people watch the world go by from their porches. But one quiet Sunday morning, when the bombs are dropped on Pearl Harbour, change comes to this small Mississippi town.
Spanning four years, 'Cinder' is the follow-up to Albert French's outstanding novel 'Billy'. It is at once the story of a woman whose life has been torn apart by tragedy, and the portrait of a town divided. It is about loss, community, history and the ties that bind.