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The Healing

ebook
5 of 5 copies available
5 of 5 copies available

"Compelling, tragic, comic, tender and mystical... Combines the historical significance of Kathryn Stockett's The Help with the wisdom of Toni Morrison's Beloved." —Minneapolis Star Tribune

Rich in mood and atmosphere, The Healing is a warmhearted novel about the unbreakable bonds between three generations of female healers and their power to restore the body, the spirit, and the soul.
In Antebellum Mississippi, Granada Satterfield has the mixed fortune to be born on the same day that her plantation mistress's daughter, Becky, dies of cholera. Believing that the newborn possesses some of her daughter's spirit, the Mistress Amanda adopts Granada, dolling her up in Becky's dresses and giving her a special place in the family despite her husband's protests. But when The Master brings a woman named Polly Shine to help quell the debilitating plague that is sweeping through the slave quarters, Granada's life changes. For Polly sees something in the young girl, a spark of "The Healing," and a domestic battle of wills begins, one that will bring the two closer but that will ultimately lead to a great tragedy. And seventy-five years later, Granada, still living on the abandoned plantation long after slavery ended, must revive the buried memories before history repeats itself.
Inspirational and suspenseful, The Healing is the kind of historical fiction readers can’t put down—and can’t wait to recommend once they’ve finished.
"A remarkable rite-of-passage novel with an unforgettable character. . . . The Healing transcends any clichés of the genre with its captivating, at times almost lyrical, prose; its firm grasp of history; vivid scenes; and vital, fully realized people, particularly the slaves with their many shades of color and modes of survival." —The Associated Press

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 3, 2011
      Bringing exciting verisimilitude to an overworked genre, this Southern saga from Odell (The View from Delphi) is rich in character and incident, but suffers from an awkward generation-bridging flashback structure. In the 1930s, elderly former slave Granada—a longtime midwife and healer—lives in the old kitchen of the once-imposing Satterfield Plantation and takes in Violet, a terrified seven-year-old. To soothe the girl’s nerves and to explain the legion of mysterious clay masks that fill the dilapidated mansion, Granada tells stories about her past, launching a series of vividly imagined, but momentum-destroying, scenes of pre–Civil War plantation life. As a young girl, Granada first served Amanda Satterfield (the opium-addled plantation mistress) as a house servant, plaything, and instrument to embarrass her husband. After the arrival of Polly Shine—a healer purchased to treat the slaves—Granada is banished from the big house and sent as a reluctant apprentice to Polly’s four-room hospital. The relationship between the two women evolves in predictable but engaging fashion. Despite the novel’s nuanced characters, Odell insists on uniting the two time lines with a hokey stab at significance toward the end. Had Odell allowed his vibrant characters to guide the narrative, rather than relying on a clichéd plot structure, this might have been a small Southern masterpiece.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2012
      When the daughter of a woman who has overdosed on a potion meant to induce an abortion comes into former slave Gran Gran's care, she recalls the saga of plantation slaves to whom emancipation eventually came, an exodus for some while others remained rooted to the soil of their captivity. Young Granada enjoys the relatively privileged life of a house slave with the added perk of being the mistress's pet, occasionally dressed up in the finery of a deceased daughter whose demise remains shrouded in the whites' refusal to admit their daughter succumbed to a disease that afflicts slaves. The odd charade of Granada's special treatment is a sticking point between Master Ben and his laudanum-addicted, unstable wife, who blames her husband for their daughter's death. Enter Polly Shine, purchased at great expense for her renown as a healer in the hopes that she will save slaves from plagues that ravage the plantation. Shine needs an apprentice and sees something in Granada, despite the girl's ill-placed affection for her white masters. Granada finds herself exiled from the plantation house, relocated to Polly's quarters, the plantation hospital. The high-spirited, mysterious and shamanistic Polly is feared and reviled for her strange ways until her undeniable healing powers gain her almost universal acceptance among the field slaves after she cures them of black tongue. But the latitude this earns her, unusual for a slave, is resented by some: the house slaves, a white overseer and Granada, who pines for her former comfort. Polly overcomes Granada's recalcitrance, cultivating the girl's vision, a unique perceptiveness that is essential to her becoming a healer. Granada vacillates in her loyalties between her master and his house and Polly, who urges her to explore her origins and who gains, to some extent, Granada's love and respect, despite the old healer's acerbic tongue and unorthodox speeches about the coming of freedom. Granada cannot deny the increasing vividness of her dream visions, as well as the pull of her origins. Plantation life is dangerous to body and soul, and Granada finds herself caught in a plot against Polly, torn between betrayal and self-discovery. Will she play Judas to her mentor? Will she ultimately obtain redemption and become a healer? Odell (The View from Delphi, 2004) stirs lyricism and sentiment into a well-researched epic of slavery and emancipation that will endear itself to the spirituality inclined.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      September 15, 2011

      Devastated by the loss of her child, plantation mistress Amanda Satterfield does the unthinkable, taking a newborn slave child (whom she names Granada) and raising her as her own. Meanwhile, illness is overwhelming the plantation's slaves, so Master Satterfield buys Polly Shine, renowned as a healer. Polly see that Granada, too, has the healer's gift, and her presence at the plantation brings roiling trouble. Odell, author of The View from Delphi, set in pre-Civil Rights Mississippi, researched the WPA's first-person slave narratives to get the details right. Nice noises about this book.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from October 1, 2011

      The white, male, Mississippi-born author (The View from Delphi) of this engrossing novel about an African American female healer growing up as a slave on a Mississippi plantation makes up in soulfulness for whatever he may lack in authenticity. Gran Gran, the healer, an old woman by 1933, isn't called on much anymore for midwifery or folk remedies when a newly motherless girl is abandoned at her door. By vividly relaying stories about people she loved as a child--especially Polly Shine, the courageous slave woman healer/midwife who taught her to use her own gift--Gran Gran brings traumatized, grieving Violet back to the land of the living. Recalling Polly Shine's blend of African traditions and Old Testament beliefs heals her own ailing soul as well. VERDICT Bound to be compared to Kathryn Stockett's best-selling The Help, this historical novel relegates its few white characters to distinctly minor status and probes complex issues of freedom and slavery, such as the dangers of an owner's favor, making it more like Dolen Perkins-Valdez's acclaimed Wench. [See Prepub Alert, 8/15/11.]--Laurie A. Cavanaugh, Wareham Free Lib., MA

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.6
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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