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Going Down South: A Novel Paperback – July 29, 2008
When fifteen-year-old Olivia Jean finds herself in the “family way,” her mother, Daisy, who has never been very maternal, springs into action. Daisy decides that Olivia Jean can’t stay in New York and whisks her away to her grandmother’s farm in Alabama to have the baby–even though Daisy and her mother, Birdie, have been estranged for years. When they arrive, Birdie lays down the law: Sure, her granddaughter can stay, but Daisy will have to stay as well. Though Daisy is furious, she has no choice.
Now, under one little roof in the 1960s Deep South, three generations of spirited, proud women are forced to live together. One by one, they begin to lose their inhibitions and share their secrets. And as long-guarded truths emerge, a baby is born–a child with the power to turn these virtual strangers into a real, honest-to-goodness family.
Praise for Going Down South:
“Long live Olivia Jean, Daisy, and Birdie! These three daughters, mothers, and women are smart, feisty, and funny. Their stories will break your heart in the very best way. I absolutely loved Going Down South!”
—Carleen Brice, author of Orange Mint and Honey
- Print length259 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherOne World
- Publication dateJuly 29, 2008
- Dimensions5.15 x 0.6 x 8 inches
- ISBN-100345480910
- ISBN-13978-0345480910
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About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Olivia Jean
Her father, Turk, went down first, holding his work boots by the strings with his overnight kit tucked under one arm. He walked on his toes, taking the seventh step down with a side maneuver because he knew it creaked. He had learned his lesson the hard way from her mother, Daisy, waiting at the top of the stairs one night about five years ago. His foot strayed and pressed ahead when he should have gone to the left or the right. He might have made it past her if it hadn’t been for that step. She had dozed off, and there were ways to get around Daisy when she was asleep. But he was in no state to remember all of the things he should have remembered. And besides, Daisy was sitting with her legs flung across the top of the landing just so she could catch him. Clutched in her right hand was a broom leaning forward at a cockeyed slant, straw bottom down and ready to do damage.
That night in March, Olivia Jean had just passed her tenth birthday and should have been asleep when he touched lucky stair number seven and it whined loud enough to wake her mother. Daisy grunted, choking on a snore, and was on her feet lightning quick without even rubbing her eyes or wiping the thin line of drool at the corner of her mouth. She gripped the broom in both hands, turned it upside down, and swung it at Turk’s copper-skinned head. He leaned away in time but she started at him again. Her robe fell open, and Olivia Jean saw long, thick legs under a nightgown that stopped near her coochie, and then one of her titties fell out as she lifted her arm and aimed again. Olivia Jean was crouched at the keyhole of her bedroom door, jaw wide, the scene surprising her so much that she banged her head against the doorknob as she tried to get a better view.
Daisy kept swinging as if she were trying to get at a spider in the corner or a big, fat cockroach that always appeared out of nowhere when company came to visit. There was rage in her swinging, rage reserved for bugs, bad impressions, and drunken husbands. Then her other titty bounced free, and Turk fell back, clutching the railing. It seemed as though he was as surprised as Olivia Jean was. In all her days Olivia Jean had never seen Daisy’s girl parts, and seeing them then, when her mother was in the middle of trying to kill her daddy, was enough to freeze Olivia Jean right where she was—on her knees, peeking into the dim hallway when she should have been curled up asleep with her Raggedy Ann tucked under her arm.
That was when Olivia Jean took a deep breath, stood up, opened the door, and ran out of her bedroom. Turk wasn’t grabbing the broom or telling Daisy to stop or trying to move away or anything. He had leaned back, dropped his arms, and let Daisy continue to hit him with the broom across his shoulders, moving him backward as if she were going to push him down the stairs. Olivia Jean knew someone was going to call the police if they didn’t stop. At four in the morning people should be in bed, going to bed, or at least thinking about going to bed, not on a rampage like Daisy was, beating Turk with the straw end of a broom while she danced around the hallway half-naked.
So when Daisy raised her broomstick higher, above her shoulders, aiming for the top of his head, Olivia Jean jumped in front of her father. No one moved. The only sound had been the swish of the broom as it waved through the air and its connection with Turk’s body—a muffled whack, whack, whack—and, too, the sound of Daisy’s heavy breathing from all the work she was doing beating Turk.
Now things were still except for Daisy’s heaving shoulders and breasts. Olivia Jean felt her heart pounding so hard that she thought it might thud out of her chest.
Then Daisy smiled—one of those low-down smiles she used when she punished Olivia Jean—aimed the broom, and almost hit her daughter; the straw brushed the air, tickling the end of Olivia Jean’s nose. Olivia Jean had felt the panic rising in the pit of her stomach as the broom swept toward her. Daisy laughed when Olivia Jean flinched. Daisy’s breathing was hard, and Olivia Jean smelled the last cigarette Daisy had smoked and the Pond’s face cream her mother rubbed into her elbows every night. She dropped the broom as Olivia Jean tried to shield Turk, her arms thrown out so that she covered a fraction of his belly. Daisy was giving him the evil eye the whole time, but he was busy ducking behind Olivia Jean as though Daisy were still hitting him, his hands in the air trying to block the broom she was no longer swinging at him. He didn’t know Daisy had stopped. All of his moving almost made Olivia Jean fall off the landing; his daughter had to plant herself in front of him, solidly, and not move. Olivia Jean was close enough to smell his body, which reeked of underarm musk and day-old pee. She wrinkled her nose and tried not breathing for seconds at a time.
Olivia Jean moved away once the broom rested at Daisy’s side. But she stayed near, trying not to glance at her mother’s face, since it was frightening when the older woman tightened her lips, raised her eyebrows, and sucked in her cheeks. Olivia Jean was scared of what would come next, but she wasn’t going to let Turk stand up to Daisy all by himself. He was her daddy, and even if Daisy did turn the broom on her, Olivia Jean was determined to take the beating. At ten years old, she loved Turk Stone with every ounce of heart she had in her thin body. And hated her mother with equal passion.
Daisy moved in close to Turk. She pointed a long finger at his chest. He had stopped twitching, but the eye he was able to keep open was streaked with red and the other was half-closed. He fell back against the wall.
“Damn, girl, stop slingin’ them things around. I can’t think straight watchin’ ’em titties jumpin’ at me all over the place. Close your robe,” Turk said.
“Turk, I ain’t playing with you, coming up in this house all hours of the night. You better stop this tomcatting around or I’ma stop you.” Her voice never rose. It whispered slick across the hallway. The righteousness of it made Olivia Jean tremble. Daisy turned with the broom and swished back into the apartment. The girl heard the dead bolt turn with a sharp click, and then Turk and Olivia Jean were alone in the hallway.
“Don’t worry, baby,” he said as he sank to the floor on the second step. Olivia Jean sat down by him. He laid his head on her lap. Again she held her breath, because he smelled. As soon as he fell asleep, so that his head became heavy on her lap and his mouth opened with one long inhale that became a gasp for air, he woke himself up. “She ain’t gonna stay mad. She let us in by day.” Olivia Jean counted to 3,563 before the door opened.
Now Daisy was in flannel pajamas buttoned up to the top.
“Next time, don’t get in the middle of grown-folk business.” Daisy didn’t meet Olivia Jean’s gaze. She held a half-smoked cigarette in one hand along with her favorite ashtray, the one she swore was good crystal given to them by a Mr. Shorty Long when she and Turk married. This was the same ashtray she would sometimes throw at him when he came home from work too late.
“This ashtray,” Daisy would say after each bout of throwing it at Turk, “is a testament to good, quality workmanship. The kind you don’t get these days.” There were dents in the wall and chipped linoleum on the floor from where Mr. Shorty Long’s present had landed, but never even a hairline fracture in the crystal itself. Olivia Jean didn’t know if it was a testament to good workmanship or just plain dumb luck that nothing had happened to it. She did know enough to stay out of the way when Daisy aimed at Turk, since Daisy didn’t have a good aim.
Holding the ashtray in one hand and the cigarette in the other, she twisted a thumb in Olivia Jean’s direction, her signal for Olivia Jean to hit the road, go to bed. It wasn’t easy moving Turk’s head from her lap. Daisy didn’t help, but Olivia Jean didn’t expect help from her.
When the girl crept out of bed the next morning and peeped in the stairwell, Turk was still there, a blanket thrown over him, now using Daisy for a pillow. Olivia went back into her bedroom, slammed the door, and got ready for school.
That night in late August as they slipped out of their apartment and down the stairs, Daisy made Turk carry his shoes so his footsteps were barely heard, but there were other noises coming from his body. Because he was so big and uncoordinated, when he walked down the stairs his shoulders bumped against the wall, and his breathing was loud, like a fish gasping for air.
Olivia followed him with her traveling bag, but not too close. She owned one suitcase, a pink one with a poodle on the front that had real hair and two glued-on pink barrettes. The suitcase kept bumping her legs as she walked down the narrow flight of stairs.
Daisy shored up the rear, and every few steps she told the other two to “hush up” as though Turk, a grown man, and Olivia Jean, a teenager, were children on a field trip. Daisy was dressed especially for sneaking out of their apartment; she wore a tan A-line dress cinched at the waist with a wide belt, a camel- colored scarf over her head, and big rhinestone-studded sunglasses. In the middle of the night. Olivia Jean wanted to ask about the sunglasses, but she already knew what her mother would say: “Olivia Jean, the first thing people notice about you is your clothes. You’ve got to learn how to make a good impression.”
Product details
- Publisher : One World
- Publication date : July 29, 2008
- Language : English
- Print length : 259 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0345480910
- ISBN-13 : 978-0345480910
- Item Weight : 6.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.15 x 0.6 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,704,367 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #12,481 in Black & African American Women's Fiction (Books)
- #14,382 in Family Saga Fiction
- #16,234 in Women's Domestic Life Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers thoroughly enjoy reading this novel, praising its well-developed characters who are full of life. Moreover, the narrative style is emotionally stimulating, with one customer noting how the words paint vivid pictures. Additionally, the book receives positive feedback for its gender representation, with one review highlighting how it demonstrates the strength of women of color, while another mentions how it brings hope to women of all generations.
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Customers thoroughly enjoyed reading this book, with one describing it as a "feel good" story.
"...one am very glad the editor permitted this long journey; it is far from boring, and it gives Glover time to develop the complicated relationships..." Read more
"I just finished Going Down South: This book was the most "feel good" read I've experienced in a long time...." Read more
"...WOW...I put myself in this novel, and was taken away to a very well written story, that IS one of the best book's I have ever read..and that's a..." Read more
"What a great book that demonstrates the strength of women of color in the face of adversity!..." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, noting that the characters are full of life, with one customer describing it as an endearing coming-of-age novel.
"...Glover is a gentle god with her characters; even Turk is rendered with a sympathy that a less skillful writer might not be able to summon...." Read more
"...From the first quirky and highly visual scene, the characters came alive and took me with them...." Read more
"...The characters are very strongly drawn and using the youngest character to begin the story was magic...." Read more
"I enjoyed Going Down South. The characters were interesting and the story touched me...." Read more
Customers appreciate the narrative style of the book, finding it emotionally stimulating and very relatable, with one customer noting how the words paint vivid pictures.
"...From the first quirky and highly visual scene, the characters came alive and took me with them...." Read more
"...Daisy...Lupe..Shorty Long, it had great twist's and turned, and was so emotional, it captivated my heart..The fighting ring, and Birdie doing a flip..." Read more
"...I like how the author broke the book up and told the story in first person for each character. I highly recommend this book." Read more
"...The characters were interesting and the story touched me...." Read more
Customers appreciate the portrayal of women in the book, with one review highlighting how it shows their evolution, while another notes how it brings hope to women of all generations and demonstrates the strength of women of color.
"...Down South is endearing coming-of-age novel that brings hope to women of all generations." Read more
"What a great book that demonstrates the strength of women of color in the face of adversity!..." Read more
"So sad when this book ended. I loved this book. I enjoyed seeing the evolution of the women and how they try to break the generational curse of not..." Read more
Customers enjoy the story of the book, with one noting it is quite believable.
"...She also takes time to develop, quite believably, the contorted cultural vagaries of 1960's Black New York and the countryside of Alabama, each very..." Read more
"Although this was a good story, it was a tad predictable in spots. The occasional plot twist did keep the story moving along, which helped...." Read more
"Great story!..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2008This is a fine and robust story of three generations of flawed motherhood.
Daisy's a New Yorker, transplanted from Alabama, for whom being a mother places a far second to being coveted by men, primarily her charming but philandering husband Turk. Her own mother, Birdie, parented in absentia, imprisoned for selling moonshine. And now her daughter, Olivia Jean, has revealed that she will be a mother--at 15.
The year is 1960, when girls like Olivia Jean routinely "disappear" for a few months to hide their growing bellies and decide what needs to be done once the baby appears. In her case, she is spirited off to Alabama by her parents, to live out her pregnancy with the delightfully impossible Birdie.
The only hitch is that Birdie adds a condition to the arrangement: one of Olivia Jean's parents must stay with her under Birdie's roof.
Going Down South takes a surprisingly long time to get there, a major sin in today's publishing world. I for one am very glad the editor permitted this long journey; it is far from boring, and it gives Glover time to develop the complicated relationships among her characters before plunging them into their own Deep South of dark family secrets and, ultimately, reconciliation. She also takes time to develop, quite believably, the contorted cultural vagaries of 1960's Black New York and the countryside of Alabama, each very much segregated at the time in its own ways.
I loved the characters in this book, particularly Olivia Jean, whose young and often confused point of view dominates. Glover is a gentle god with her characters; even Turk is rendered with a sympathy that a less skillful writer might not be able to summon. He, like the women in his life, is just another hapless mortal, walking his particular tightrope without a net.
My only quarrel with Going Down South was Birdie's flip in the kitchen. I won't tell you about it here; you'll just have to read the book to see if you agree.
Susan O'Neill, author: Don't Mean Nothing: Short Stories of Vietnam
- Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2008I just finished Going Down South: This book was the most "feel good" read I've experienced in a long time. From the first quirky and highly visual scene, the characters came alive and took me with them. Rich descriptions ("stained glassed windows, but when you got up close you saw that some were only drawings of stained glass taped on top of windows held open by iron bars,") poignant similes ("Charm oozed out of him like Karo syrup, heavy, smooth and sweet," ) and real life metaphors ("They were night and day, one a piece of bread, the other a thick pork chop with dripping gravy) make every page a sensory experience.
Ms. Glover grounds the reader in familiar objects, ("She'd heard the poetry of Langston Hughes, stretched to Zora Neale Hurston, twisted to her mother's laughter,") oftentimes delivering the essence of a whole lifetime in one sentence ("...Daisy became Batman and Olivia Jean imagined herself as the old butler, Alfred Pennyworth.")
Actually my favorite thing about this book is that it's a plethora of show-don't-tell. Though all a part of the story, the focus is not on race relations, spousal abuse, teenage pregnancy or abortion, it's on life lessons, relationships, and how we all learn and grow. It exudes a philosophy that we all learn from our mistakes, and oftentimes there is no one person or group to blame. This universal idea relates to all colors, ages, and socioeconomic groups. Going Down South is endearing coming-of-age novel that brings hope to women of all generations.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2017I could not put this book down..I was sad when it ended, and I read a lot of book's..I laughed, i cried, and could imagine in my mind, that this book NEED'S to be a Movie..When I was reading it, I could imagine the actor's I would love to portray, Birdie, my very FAVORITE person in the book..Daisy...Lupe..Shorty Long, it had great twist's and turned, and was so emotional, it captivated my heart..The fighting ring, and Birdie doing a flip in the kitchen, WOW...I put myself in this novel, and was taken away to a very well written story, that IS one of the best book's I have ever read..and that's a lot of book's..I honestly think this could be a hit movie, a little saltier than The Help, by portraying black women, their trial's of being a woman of color in the South..All I can say, is if you LOVE a great read, don't let this read pass you by...amazingly written..Love love loved it..Tammy Jo Hammond
- Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2019What a great book that demonstrates the strength of women of color in the face of adversity! Each of the female characters makes a choice that results in sacrifice. But through those choices become the strong, learn lessons, and find peace. I see many of the women of color in my life reflected in this story.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2017I loved this book though I didn't think I would when I began reading. The characters are very strongly drawn and using the youngest character to begin the story was magic. I found myself wanting to know how her issues would work out m; then there came strutting along another issue which even made me angry! Daisy and Birdie are formidable women who traveled, literally, through mud to forge a bond that is lasting. I am so happy to have read this novel!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2018This was the first book that I read by Bonnie Glover. Historical Fiction is one of my favorite genres. I really enjoyed the book. I like how the author broke the book up and told the story in first person for each character. I highly recommend this book.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2022I liked this book because it shared so many things and taught you should not keeps secrets as they can tear you and your family apart