The Invention of Wings
by Sue Monk Kidd is a story about a young girl who grows up on a southern plantation
to become one of the greatest human rights advocates who would influence
countless women after her. When I was given the book, I was told that it was
about a real person which made the story more interesting. As I started
reading, I realized I recognized the name, Sarah Grimke. As I googled her name,
I realized that I studied her in my college history courses. Along with her
sister, Angelina and her brother-in-law, Theodore, she would write the second
most influential anti-slavery literature. American
Slavery As It Is would be second only to Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Ms. Stowe was
heavily influenced by their book.
The Invention of Wings
opens in November 1803 with Hetty “Handful” Grimke, a slave and daughter of the
Grimke’s seamstress, Charlotte. Handful is given to Sarah as her lady’s maid by
her parents on Sarah’s eleventh birthday. Sarah wants no part in owning a slave
but she is stuck. She vows to free Handful somehow. The two women will form a
friendship that will test the understanding what a privileged white woman could
have on the plight of the African slaves. Through both women’s eyes, the reader
will be witness to the harshness that slaves were treated with. Harsh
punishments for behavior as simple as looking in the wrong direction. Sarah will find a voice in a society where women weren't allowed to have opinions much less voice them.
The story is actually told from the perspectives of both
Sarah and Handful as each chapter is from viewpoint of one of the women. Handful
as she struggles with the bonds of slavery and Sarah as she struggles with the
bonds of societal gender roles. The reader begins to see both sides of a
turning points in our nation’s history. The battle for the abolition movements is
heating up as the story ends in June 1838, 23 years before the start of the
Civil War, the reader knows it’s not the end for these two women. While I was familiar with Sarah Grimke, I enjoyed reading
her background and how she developed her world views. She is known as an
abolitionist and a woman’s rights advocate but to her, they are one in the
same: human rights. Racial equality and gender equality it was all the same to
her.
This book begins slowly but as you read, you get hooked. You
want to know what happens to Handful, her mom, Charlotte, and Sarah. I enjoyed
Ms. Kidd’s inclusion of the famous names of the time. Names like Denmark Vesey,
a freed slave who would be executed for planning a slave revolt, Henry Clay who
helped devise the Missouri Compromise, which would add fuel to the abolition
fire, and William Lloyd Garrison, editor of an abolitionist newspaper, The
Liberator. There is so much more that I could write about but I would
rather you read the book for yourself and discover the history of a woman who was instrumental to the cause of abolition even though many who study
history will never know her name.
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