Book description
From the celebrated author of The Secret Life of Bees and the forthcoming novel The Book of Longings, a novel about two unforgettable American women.
Writing at the height of her narrative and imaginative gifts, Sue Monk Kidd presents a masterpiece of hope, daring, the quest for freedom, and the…
Why read it?
10 authors picked The Invention of Wings as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I love this book’s two freedom fighters: the historical Sarah Grimké and the fictional enslaved woman Handful.
It’s the early 1800s in Charleston, SC. Privileged white girl Sarah bucks cultural expectations for women, while Handful fights the cruel slavery system. Sarah repudiates her upbringing in order to support abolition, and Handful stakes everything in pursuit of freedom, “to leave or die trying.”
I loved learning about the Grimké sisters, giants in the abolition movement, and the West African story-quilt tradition, whereby women tell their lives through the art of needlework. This book was transformative for me; Sarah’s and Handful’s transgressive…
From Nell's list on historical fiction with bad-ass women protagonists.
Wow! An excellent example of historical fiction. Powerful women (the Grimke sisters) bucking the system they were born into (a slave-owning plantation family) and told through the perspective of an enslaved woman and her intellectually hungry “owner” with several other historic characters filling out their “adventure.”
Each character is clearly delineated, and the social mores of slave “owning” families are clearly portrayed. I enjoyed the way, while still historically accurate, these women broke through seemingly impossible walls and impacted (for the better) US history. The characterization is great. The writing is beautiful with an easy flow. I had a hard…
From Laura's list on quietly powerful women.
From the very first page, I was entranced by this story of two girls, one from an elite Charleston family and the other her personal slave, whose complex relationship involves affection and mutual support as well as misunderstandings provoked by the power gap between them.
The struggle of Sarah Grimke to break away from the passive role imposed on girls to become an abolitionist, and her slave, Handful’s, even more horrendous battle for freedom, engrosses the reader with unexpected twists and turns and superb portrayal of personal growth and conflict.
This author’s extensive research and psychological insight, which enabled her…
From Barbara's list on courageous women facing seemingly insuperable odds.
If you love The Invention of Wings...
This masterpiece is a story of the Grimké sisters, Sarah and Angelina—path-breakers in the abolitionist and women’s rights movements—interwoven with the story of Hetty, a young slave girl given to Sarah on her 11th birthday.
Hetty and Sarah find their way through the prejudice and barriers of a patriarchal society that views them as less than. Both learn to soar.
This book affected me deeply as a writer. Kidd is simply a master of words. But the story itself stripped away my naivety about what our society would look like had these women not taken on the patriarchal system. It…
From T.K.'s list on history’s remarkable women.
Sue Monk Kidd’s book, The Invention of Wings, blends fact and fiction in this pre-Civil War story of two young women. I was fascinated by reading chapters that alternated between Sarah Grimke, a historical character, representing South Carolina’s aristocracy and Hetty, called “Handful,” who is given as an enslaved maid to Sarah on her eleventh birthday. Sarah’s conscience won’t allow this division to endure. I loved the memorable scene where the two girls escape through a hatch in the roof to drink tea and tell each other secrets. For me, this image of flight in a shared hope for…
From Evie's list on the intertwinings of war, conscience, and religion.
Forget the stereotypes—the images we learned in school about slaves and their owners. Sarah Grimke is best known as a dedicated Northern abolitionist, despite her South Carolina upbringing. Few of her admirers would suspect that Sarah received her first slave as a present on her eleventh birthday. The slave girl, Hetty, was called “Handful” because she was too bright and energetic to be obedient. The two grew up together as fast friends, forever linked despite their differences. They tell their stories in alternating chapters, a literary device that highlights their contrasting experiences and attitudes. Together they have much to teach…
From Carolyn's list on what historians don’t tell you on the American Civil War.
If you love Sue Monk Kidd...
I think of this novel as a prequel of sorts to my own book, because it is inspired by the life of Sarah Grimke, another abolitionist and pioneer of women’s rights who, along with her sister Angelina, was an idol of Lucy Stone’s. The book opens on Sarah’s 11th birthday when she is gifted a slave, "Handful,” a gift she has no interest in keeping. Kidd makes the courageous choice to tell the story from both Handful’s and Sarah’s perspective, giving us very different views of pre-Civil War life in Charleston and what it takes to defy the…
From Katherine's list on the real lives of kick-ass women.
The Invention of Wings is set in the early 19th century and tells the story of a young white woman who helps her personal slave escape to freedom. It has several themes that are comparable to my novel: an unlikely, interracial, and sacred friendship; male domination; and the courage to chase a dream that will benefit others. Both books rely on alternating narratives: mine switches back and forth in time, and Kidd’s alternates between narrators. Both novels also invoke the power of spiritual lore. Kidd introduces the myth of the spirit tree while mine revolves around the grizzly bear…
From G.'s list on bad ass women in historical fiction.
Set in America’s deep south in the nineteenth century, it’s a story about courage, friendship against all odds, and love. Sarah is given a little slave girl for her eleventh birthday. Unable to accept the inhumanity of the cruel culture in which she lives, she sets out to change it – and in so doing unleashes a whole heap of trouble. I love this book for the writing, it’s like poetry; flowing, lyrical, and as beautiful as light. It’s the most touching story. I cried various times because I was so moved. It also helped me learn about and understand…
From Santa's list on love at their core.
If you love The Invention of Wings...
This riveting novel, inspired by the true stories of the Grimke sisters, women who dedicated themselves to the Abolitionist fervor, specifically Sarah, also fleshes out through fiction the full-bodied reality of the role of women in 1800 culture and the plight of slaves. This is an exquisitely written novel that offers an unswerving view of a terrible aspect of American history, whose repercussions haunt us still. It is a view seen through “women whose struggles for liberation, empowerment, and expression will leave no reader unmoved.”
From Diane's list on little-known Civil War era history.
If you love The Invention of Wings...
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