"As Iola finished, there was a ring of triumph in her voice, as if she were reviewing a path she had trodden with bleeding feet, and seen it change to lines of living light. Her soul seemed to be flashing through the rare loveliness of her face and etherealizing its beauty.
Everyone was spellbound. Dr. Latimer was entranced, and, turning to Hon. Dugdale, said, in a low voice and with deep-drawn breath," She is angelic!...She is strangely beautiful!...The tones of her voice are like benedictions of peace; her words a call to higher service and nobler life."
-Iola Leroy, written by Francis E.W. Harper 1892
When I was thirteen I fell in love with African American Women's Literature. The novel that done me in was Alice Walker's A Color Purple. In under grad I knew There Is a God when Agnes Scott College offered a course called Black Feminist Thought. What I didn't know was that my soul would leap for a stranger kind of fiction- Christian Fiction.
Once believed to be the first novel written by a Black author was Francis E.W. Harper's Iola Leroy. I return to this novel often as I write my own works both as a benchmark and as a warning. This month I want to share this novel with you, as it relates to early Black Christian Thought, sociodynamics between Black Women of the early nineteenth century, and what we can learn about storytelling, theme, and orthodoxy as new, liberated Christian writers.
You can pick up a copy of Iola Leroy at your local library or download the text version for free here. So there's no excuse. Ha. :) If you do, please let me know in the gospel fiction forum.
Other Reading Guides for Iola Leroy:
- Iola Leroy Online
- Iola Leroy Spark Notes
- Iola Leroy Wikipedia
- My Old Spot - African American Women Writer's Finding Voice
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2 comments:
Thanks for a very interesting post! I have never read Iola Leroy, but as soon as I can get my hands on a copy, I want to correct that. Nice to discover your blog,too (I found it in the links section of the Faith in Fiction Blog).
Thank you for stopping by. I plan to talk about this novel all month. And then begin to talk about some African American Classics and the spiritual threads found in them.
Faith in Fiction is the joint to be. :)
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