(10/19/2019)
I have only known Jacqueline Woodson as a children's or young adult writer, the winner of the Newberry Prize in 2014 for Brown Girl Dreaming. When her new novel, Red to the Bone, became available at my library, I grabbed it, and I am ever so glad that I did. Now I will certainly go back and find Another Brooklyn, her first adult novel which,, in 2016, was nominated for the National Book Award for Fiction. This latest novel, Red to the Bone, is not to be missed.Tthe story of a young girl, Melody. Each chapter is told in the voice of a different family member, father, mother, grandparents, and Melody, of course, and jumps time, sex, race, and many other issues. How one writer can capture the mood and nature of so many possibilities and personalities, their pride, their joy, their pain, with age and sex and race an religion posing no barrier, is hard to imagine, but Woodson more than successfully manages this. These people are so real, their stories so vital, that in spite of possible vast differences, they relate so very clearly to all our lives. Woodson's prose, infused with subtle poetry, rings and carries the reader the a river through their history, and in the end, hope not only rises, but as Woodson says, "gleams." This is a powerful read and clearly elevates this author's literary status.