The Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd — book cover

Book details

The Invention of Wings

by Sue Monk Kidd

2014

About the book

The story follows Sarah Grimké, the daughter of a wealthy Charleston judge, and Hetty "Handful," the enslaved girl gifted to Sarah on her eleventh birthday. Spanning the early nineteenth century, the narrative tracks their intertwined lives as they navigate systemic oppression from opposite sides of the racial divide. Sarah rejects her family’s lifestyle to pursue legal education and abolitionist activism, eventually becoming one of the first female orators in the United States. Handful seeks physical and spiritual liberation through risky acts of rebellion and the preservation of her mother’s stories and hand-sewn quilts.

Readers of historical realism and biographical fiction choose this book to understand the origins of the American suffragist and abolitionist movements. It attracts those interested in the domestic realities of the antebellum South and the specific legal barriers faced by women and enslaved people. The reader leaves with a detailed perspective on the Grimké sisters' historical contributions and a concrete sense of how personal defiance against institutional laws shaped early human rights activism.

Details

Published
2014
Language
EN