June 16, 2020
The Book of Lost Friends by Lisa Wingate
As the Civil
War rages, slaves Hannie Gossett, her mother, and siblings are sent by their
owner from Louisiana to his property in Texas, as a way to protect his
assets. But the relative sent to
safeguard the slaves on their journey begins selling them off at the Texas
towns they pass through. Ten years after
the end of the Civil War, Hannie still lives at the Gossetts’ Louisiana
plantation, but as part of a group of sharecroppers who have worked to gain
ownership of their land. But the
plantation owner has gone missing, and the sharecroppers fear that if he dies,
his wife will burn the deeds to the sharecroppers’ property. Hannie breaks into the main house, determined
to find the deed, only to find that Mr. Gossett’s mixed race daughter Juneau
Jane is there as well, searching for documents that will protect her and her mother (Mr. Gossett's mulatto "fancy woman"). Determined to track down Mr. Gossett or his
business partner, Hannie disguises herself as a boy and travels with Gossett’s
two daughters from Louisiana to Texas to try and locate one of the men, or at least find out what happened to Gossett.
Along the way, the girls discover a newspaper column called Lost Friends, which prints letters for people (mostly former slaves) seeking lost family members. They begin to collect more stories from the people they meet on their quest, and Hannie vows to help as many of them as she can, while searching for her own lost family.
In a
parallel story, Benny Silva takes a job as an English teacher in Augustine,
Texas, the town founded by the Gossett family.
The school is woefully short of supplies, and she contacts Nathan
Gossett, the heir to the Gossett house, about donating books from the Gossett
library to the school. Little do either
of them suspect that they are opening up a long-sealed chapter of local
history.
Like her previous novel (Before We Were Yours), Wingate shines a spotlight on a hidden or forgotten piece of history. The newspaper excerpts printed between the chapters really humanize the true horror of slavery even among those who treated their slaves "well": of men owning other people and selling them off with no more thought than they would their cattle, often being sold repeatedly; of the separation of families; of the lifelong desire and need to find those families again, with the search sometimes lasting over 40 years; and of the injustices that former slaves continued to suffer, even after freedom.
Moving and at times gut-wrenching, I highly recommend this historical novel to anyone who wants to learn more about unknown history and injustices that last to this day.
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