The Professor's Bayonet
https://48bconsulting.com/ https://www.amazon.com/Half-Truths-Carol-Baldwin/dp/1957656859 Kate Dinsmore is like many characters in coming-of-age stories who early on discover the power of words to reveal and defend the truth. The seed was planted early, perhaps with the death of her brother, Jake, but readers soon learn that even her small southern town cannot keep her cooped up. She must spread her wings, which is why she goes to Charlotte, North Carolina to immerse herself in the formal study of words. Kate Dinsmore wants to become a journalist, wants to use her words to champion justice and stand against men like her Papaw who assert between drags from their cigarettes or spitting tobacco juice that “we’ve got to keep them coloreds from taking over.” Carol Baldwin’s debut novel, Half-Truths, is a powerhouse of a story. Readers will quickly see why this book has already won many reputable awards. A quick and lively pace combines expertly with insights on Jim Crow bigotry and the justice that must come out on top to create a narrative that is engrossing and a list of characters as complex as they are nuanced. Baldwin does not work with caricatures; indeed, she understands that the culture of the Jim Crow South was multi-dimensional, even paradoxical. There were no clear good guys or bad guys, just flawed ideas and modes of thinking that tragically tampered with everyone’s moral compass. In Charlotte, Baldwin’s ingenue protagonist, Kate, find friendship in Lillian, an older, more sophisticated city girl. To be sure, she is the country mouse to Lillian’s city mouse, and the contrast is unnerving – there is even some conflict -- but soon enough, she finds a way forward, discovering to her great surprise that she and Lillian, who is Black, happen to share a great-grandfather. With Kate poised to become a society girl, having a Black relative anywhere on the family tree would be a disaster for both Kate and her well-to-do grandparents under whose charge she is as a new resident of Charlotte. The Ku Klux Klan otherwise known as the invisible empire is very much visible to Kate and her kinfolk. Stepping out of line could be dangerous. Yet Kate still has her words. And her truth. The battle lines are drawn, and young Kate, like David, is about to take on her own Goliath. Baldwin gifts her readers with a story that refuses to gloss over or otherwise forget the past. For this reason, this book is invaluable to readers of all ages who are not timid about wrestling with old norms and old practices, asking themselves questions about their origin and how they were able to be sustained at all over the years. Half-Truths lends itself to a discussion on history, yes, but beyond that, readers can also explore human psychology. Readers might ask themselves: How did we let ourselves get so hateful? What did these Jim Crow laws really say about us? It is more than about racial segregation, more than about one race systematically scuttling another race. Perhaps there was something spiritual going on: an unseen malice that kept everybody on edge and pointing fingers. Ultimately, Baldwin’s Half-Truths ranks up there with other books including Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin, which was published in 1961. Though nonfiction, Griffin’s book also tells the story of a journalist who immerses himself in the world of the Jim Crow South in order to uncover truths that could both undermine the status quo and bring people together across racial lines. Baldwin accomplishes the same. Brave Kate refuses to be cowed by what older, gruffer, and arguably more threatening men promote. Though it takes time and a battery of tests that make her stronger, Kate comes out on top. Truths are revealed, and healing begins. Baldwin’s Half-Truths is a small triumph, and those eager to secure a story that both entertains and edifies should not wait to get a copy.
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