Three years after the publication of his much-heralded, Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel, The Known World, Edward P. Jones returned with an
elegiac, luminous masterpiece, All Aunt Hagar's Children. In these
fourteen sweeping and sublime stories, Jones resurrects the minor
characters in his first award-winning story collection, Lost in the
City. The result is vintage Jones: powerful, magisterial tales that
showcase his ability to probe the complexities and tenaciousness of the
human spirit.
All Aunt Hagar's Children is filled with people who call Washington,
D.C., home. Yet it is the city's ordinary citizens, not its power
brokers, who most concern Jones. Here, everyday people who thought the
values of the South would sustain them in the North find "that the
cohesion born and nurtured in the south would be but memory in less than
two generations."