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Ollie Miss
University of Alabama Press, 2007 Paper: 978-0-8173-0388-4 Library of Congress Classification PS3515.E43422O45 1988 Dewey Decimal Classification 813.54
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Ollie Miss is a folk novel of Southern backwoods and rural, poor black life in Alabama's recent past. The novel serves as an important social record of a past society, time, and circumstance that would evolve into an era of social change, namely the civil rights movement. Ollie Miss is also a love story that speaks of personal loneliness and the need for fulfillment in a young black woman, poor and ignorant, and unattached. It is a story of Ollie Miss's personal struggle to "become" a person in her own right, to be independent, and to find some small measure of happiness in life. See other books on: Alabama | Fiction | Henderson, George Wylie | Literary Criticism | Poetry See other titles from University of Alabama Press |
Nearby on shelf for American literature / Individual authors / 1900-1960:
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