Black Coffee discussion

This topic is about
The Darkest Child
2015 Group Reads
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The Darkest Child: December HF read
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LOL - I am a new release junkie that likes to read books when they are first released.
While I have not read everything - I do read more current releases than older books.

LOL - I am a new release junkie that likes to read books when they are first released.
While I ha..."
Lately I find myself doing the same thing. lol
Lol that's funny ladies because I am the exact opposite. I rarely ever read new releases. I don't even know how to find out about a new release lol. I definitely rarely read bestsellers.
Ok group, it's time to start reading The Darkest Child. It seems everyone has already read this before. where are the 12 people who voted for this book?! lol. My copy is coming in the mail. Is anyone else reading?
Zanna are you still reading this one? Is anyone else reading or should we cancel? I know Christmas time is a hard to to stay focused. Let me know!

I'm wondering if "availability" should be one factor people consider when nominating and/or voting for books? It's what prevented me from participating this time.
poingu wrote: "This looks like a great book, one I want to read and would love to read with a group, but it's not in my library or bookstore so I'd need to order online. That's ok, I'm happy to order, but I didn'..."
Hey there. Well our group reads are pretty relaxed. You can pop in anytime that you want so that is never anything you have to worry about. spoiler alerts will probably be the main issue.
Hey there. Well our group reads are pretty relaxed. You can pop in anytime that you want so that is never anything you have to worry about. spoiler alerts will probably be the main issue.

Rozelle Quinn is so fair-skinned that she can pass for white. Her ten children are mostly light, too. They constitute the only world she rules and controls. Her power over them is all she has in an otherwise cruel and uncaring universe.
Rozelle favors her light-skinned kids, but Tangy Mae, 13, her darkest-complected child, is the brightest. She desperately wants to continue with her education. Her mother, however, has other plans. Rozelle wants her daughter to work cleaning houses for whites, like she does, and accompany her to the “Farmhouse,” where Rozelle earns extra money bedding men. Tangy Mae, she’s decided, is of age.
This is the story from an era when life’s possibilities for an African-American were unimaginably different.
Delores Phillips was born in Bartow County, Georgia in 1950, the second of four children. She graduated from Cleveland State University with a bachelor of arts in English and works as a nurse at a state psychiatric hospital. Her work has appeared in Jean’s Journal, Black Times, and The Crisis. She has lived in Cleveland, Ohio since 1964.
Who will be joining in on this book discussion?