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There are currently 28 reader reviews for Happy Land
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Wendy F
Lovely historical fiction
A tale of family, land ownership, and freedom. Learning the history of this intentional community shows the perseverance of a people. The love and heartbreak we can feel within our families is shown throughout this book. It gives hope through history.
Diane J. (Grove City, PA)
Finding Refuge in Happy Land
Each of Doris Perkins-Valdez's books allow readers to look behind the scenes and witness the courage and faith of enslaved people. The author has successfully narrated difficult periods in our country's history (spanning from pre Civil War time through ongoing racial violence in the post Civil war Reconstruction era) which we need to continue to revisit in order to go forward.
Perkins-Valdez's newest book, Happy Land, reveals a how a community of freed slaves moved away from the developing KKK threat to build a safe community protected with their own governance. This unique commune was known as a "kingdom" (modeled after African communities) and remarkably, they gained the freedom of land ownership.
This little known chapter of Black history is presented in an appealing dual timeline. We are first introduced to the group of brave and hardworking individuals who establish the kingdom in the 1870's. Then, a modern account traces the decedents of the Kingdom of Happy Land founders. It was fascinating to connect the dots of the multiple generations.
The only bump in the road I encountered was in the second half of the book. A perplexing plot line develops between two characters in the Kingdom of Happy Land. This felt like a diversion that only delayed learning of the social, legal and technological events that threatened the kingdom. The story finally gets recentered and arrives at a realistic and satisfactory conclusion.
I strongly recommend Happy Land to historic fiction and literary fiction readers. Through the lively and sympathetic characters Perkins-Valdez lovingly puts together, I learned about so much more about Reconstruction era history.
Thank you BookBrowse for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
Janine S. (Wyoming, MI)
Unknown part of black history enlightens
First, and most interestingly, the topic of this book is an unknown part of American history: a black settlement known as " The Kingdom of the Happy Land." This actual "black communal society" existed in Western North Carolina during Reconstruction. Not much is actually known as most of it has vanished, but its possibility "reflects on a curious story of a Black Appalachian utopia" as Danielle Dukin writes in her webpage, "A Black Kingdom in postbellum Appalachia." But this premise is intriguing.
Valdez starts her book in present day with a fictional relative of the founders of this kingdom going to visit her grandmother, Mother Rita. Mother Rita has called Nikki "home" as she needs help staying on her land and since Nikki is a real estate agent, Mother Rita believes Nikki can help her. The book then switches to the past with the founding "queen," Luella Bobo, of Happy Land telling her story of how this kingdom came to be. Alternating between past and present, the interlocking stories have a similar theme: achieving ownership of the land and evading unscrupulous provocateurs, though this is a lighter theme compared to the stories of two women discovering what they are capable of doing and achieving.
I enjoyed the modern story a bit more than the story of the founding of Happy Land because of the legal aspects involved in Mother Rita getting her land back. While Luella's story was essential, I just didn't resonate as well with it.
Overall, this was an enjoyable read as well as an opportunity to learn more about black history.
Kathryn S. (St. Helena Island, SC)
Happy Land
Nikkie, a DC real estate agent, receives an unexpected – and inconvenient- request from her maternal grandmother living in North Carolina. Mother Rita urgently wants Nikki to visit her, for the first time in a long while. Nikki's first-person narrative of that visit and the ensuing events is interwoven with the first-person narrative of her great-great-great grandmother Luella who moved from South Carolina to North Carolina in the post-emancipation era. Luella helped establish a community of formerly enslaved men and women they called the Kingdom of Happy Land. The interplay of the narrative of the pioneers of the kingdom (complete with a king and queen) and that of their descendants creates an absorbing novel that explores several themes: family structure and relationships; the value of knowing of one's family roots; the significance (and fragility) of land ownership; the role that resilience and determination play in fighting injustice.
The Kingdom of Happy Land was established on property that was granted to African Americans after emancipation and has been passed down from generation to generation without a will. The present-day dilemmas facing the heirs of such property as "tenants in common" are portrayed through the struggles of the Lovejoy family to retain their land.
Readers unfamiliar with the history of the post-emancipation South and the concept of "heirs' property" will find their reading experience enhanced by a little background research on those topics.