Once I started reading, I couldn't put down. The book spoke volumes of how we, women of color, keep secrets and withstand things that we are not proud of doing but we did to survive. It's been a while since I read the first book in the series but it all came easily back to me because the author brought different scenarios from the previous book into the story without "re-hashing" the previous story, in-depth, as some writers do.
This book deals with family, friends, children (black & bi-racial), molestation, racism, love, and secrets. Annette is one of the main characters and she narrates the story with humor, honesty, sarcasm, anger, and most of all regrets. It's about her life and what happened after her daddy left Gussie Mae, her mom, and Annette to start a life with another woman; a white woman during the period of segregation.
The author weaves throughout the story with the ease and finesse of a skilled artisan. She brings the characters to life and their activities very believable. She deals with things that are happening everyday (rape, molestation, murder...) methodically and intersects them throughout the book. Her writing implies that we, humans, are determining what love should look like, how it should be instead of allowing it to happen.
This book is a good book for middle-aged book clubs & maybe clubs with 25 year olds and above.