Kassie's pick is On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon, by Kaye Gibbons
Synopsis: In the year
1900--on the afternoon she suspects might be the last of her long,
eventful life--Emma Garnet Tate Lowell sets down on paper what came
before, determined to make an honest account of it. Born to privilege on
a James River plantation, she grew up determined to escape the
domination of her bullying, self-made father, Samuel P. Tate, and
ultimately seceded from his control to marry Quincy Lowell, a surgeon
and member of the distinguished Boston family. But then came the Civil
War. Working alongside Quincy, assisting him in the treatment of wounded
soldiers, she witnessed scenes that would be engraved forever in her
memory. And, before beginning the long journey of her own
reconstruction, she must face the shame of her relationship to her
"servants" and learn the terrible secret that shaped her father's life.
Kassie says: Pre-Civil War South, death, slavery, violence, passion--but this book is an elegy for all that. The beauty of the writing and unexpected forms of love and redemption make it flow to the end.