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B. B. Kemp

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BLACK WALL STREET BURNING Cover
HISTORICAL FICTION

BLACK WALL STREET BURNING

BY B. B. Kemp • POSTED ON Feb. 23, 2021

In Kemp’s new historical novel, a young girl’s coming-of-age story provides a window into Tulsa’s Black community in the early 20th century.

Olivia Truluck is born to a family of Black farmers working their 41 acres in southwest Missouri. She spends much of her time talking to her imaginary friends and dreaming of a more exciting existence in St. Louis or Kansas City. Ten-year-old Olivia gets the chance sooner than she expected, however, after the Ku Klux Klan burns down the family house, sending the Trulucks looking for a new home. Along with a few other Black families, the Trulucks follow a former slave–turned-preacher known as Brother Sin-Eater, who had a revelation that God wants the community to strike out into the wilderness for the land of milk and honey. The Trulucks do end up finding a promised land of sorts…over the state border in Tulsa. Olivia’s mother starts a thriving grocery business, and the Greenwood District—as the city’s Black neighborhood came to be known—quickly grows into a prosperous community, attracting the likes of Booker T. Washington. Unfortunately for Olivia and the rest of the Trulucks, the same forces that drove them out of Missouri lurk on the edges of their new home as well. Kemp’s prose, as narrated by Olivia, is lively and textured. Here Olivia describes her feelings about finding a boyfriend: “Hogs are sometimes defined as being selfish when it comes to food they eat, and they live in squalor. Even though the image of a boy going ‘whole hog’ on my body made me want to vomit, it didn’t deter me from trying to find out what all the hubbub was about when it came to courting.” The book does an admirable job balancing the good and bad of history. While the reader comes to expect atrocities, there is also a lightness and optimism to the novel. The richness with which Kemp imbues Olivia, her family, and her community elevates them beyond the purely tragic and into something more eternal.

A well-crafted historical novel with a plucky protagonist.

Pub Date: Feb. 23, 2021

ISBN: 979-8-70-695231-0

Page count: 187pp

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: Feb. 27, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2021

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

Forbidden Love

She was born an African Princess in 1790, only to be sold into slavery. He was from a wealthy White family in New England. Even though forbidden by the church, the joining of John F. Webber and Sylvia Hector was the first nineteenth-century mixed marriage. Forbidden Love offers a new historical perspective of Texas’ founders and early America’s attitude toward people of color that has carried forward to this day. How John and Sylvia overcame racism and prejudice is written on the pages of the historical novel Forbidden Love. It was a forbidden love. She was born an African Princess in 1790, only to be sold into slavery. He was from a wealthy White family in New England. Even though forbidden by the church, the joining of John F. Webber and Sylvia Hector was the first nineteenth-century mixed marriage. Forbidden Love offers a new historical perspective of Texas’ founders and early America’s attitude toward people of color that has carried forward to this day. How John and Sylvia overcame racism and prejudice is written on the pages of the historical novel Forbidden Love.
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