In the finale to the acclaimed trilogy, upheaval in Zora Neale
Hurston's family and hometown persuade her to leave childhood behind and
find her destiny beyond Eatonville.
For Carrie and her best friend, Zora, Eatonville--America's first
incorporated Black township--has been an idyllic place to live out their
childhoods. But when a lynch mob crosses the town's border to pursue a
fugitive and a grave robbery resuscitates the ugly sins of the past, the
safe ground beneath them seems to shift. Not only has Zora's own
father--the showboating preacher John Hurston--decided to run against
the town's trusted mayor, but there are other unsettling things afoot,
including a heartbreaking family loss, a friend's sudden illness, and
the suggestion of voodoo and zombie-ism in the air, which a curious and
grieving Zora becomes all too willing to entertain.
In this fictionalized tale, award-winning author Victoria Bond explores
the end of childhood and the bittersweet goodbye to Eatonville by
preeminent author Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960). In so doing, she
brings to a satisfying conclusion the story begun in the award-winning
Zora and Me and its sequel, Zora and Me: The Cursed Ground, sparking
inquisitive readers to explore Hurston's own seminal work.