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Sabra Waldfogel
Author
Let Me Fly
Former slave Rachel Mannheim and former slave owner Adelaide Kaltenbach fought a war to be sisters. Now that the Civil War is over, a new fight is just beginning. Adelaide, married to a Georgia cotton planter, never dreamed that she would side with the Union or the Freedmen’s Bureau. In Cass County, just after the Civil War, she’s done both. Her school for the county’s black children has earned her the warm appreciation of Captain Lewis Hart, Union war hero and Bureau agent, and the animosity of her neighbors and former friends. Her half-sister Rachel, no longer Adelaide’s slave, used to dream of being free. Free to marry. Free to make a living. Free to educate her daughter Eliza. But after emancipation, freedom remains elusive—and risky. When Rachel buys a hundred acres of cotton land, with the help of the Bureau’s dashing black lawyer, Daniel Pereira, she becomes the target of the newly-formed Ku Klux Klan. As they struggle to rebuild their lives, can each sister find the courage to face violence and hatred—and follow her heart to a new kind of freedom?
Reviews
In this solid novel from Waldfogel (Sister of Mine), it’s 1865 and the Civil War has ended, but the battle for freedom is just beginning for the families working their cotton fields outside of Cassville, Ga., a once bustling town that has been burned to ash by General Sherman’s troops. Rachel Mannheim is a recently freed slave, and she wishes she could marry Henry Kaltenbach, the man who had owned her, loves her still, and has given her a daughter. But he’s married to Rachel’s white half-sister, Adelaide Kaltenbach, and Adelaide is bitter but unwilling to divorce—not because of her Jewish religion, but because she can’t bear to “spread our shame all over the South.” She also feels a connection with Rachel, and she’s an advocate of emancipation, even daring to open a school for the local freed black children. She meets Captain Lewis Hart, an agent of the Freedmen’s Bureau, which endeavors to help newly free citizens find a way to survive. Adelaide’s marriage to Henry has been over almost from its start, and Captain Hart’s attention is hard to ignore, but the simmering violence surrounding reconstruction can both crush and ignite romance. This is a probing look at all fashions of passion in the post–Civil War South, particularly the raw hunger for the freedom to love as one will. (Self-published.)
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