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Friday, November 1, 2024

The Missing Girl & Jessa is Back by Stacia Moffett #historical #fiction #giveaway #bookreview #rabtbooktours @RABTBookTours

 


Historical Fiction

Date Published: Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Publisher: Peanut Butter Publishing

 

 

In rural Radford, Tennessee, in the 1950s, a white family is killed in an automobile accident.

Upon hearing the news of her parents’ and grandfather’s deaths, Jessa runs away with her dog, creating problems for her town, especially for the sheriff, her parents’ friends, and the Black community that falls under suspicion. Racial distrust shapes the town’s response to Jessa’s disappearance, and as the weeks stretch out, the weather poses increasing challenges for Jessa as she shelters in a hollow tree while attempting to provide for herself and her dog, Cassie. Help appears from an unexpected source as a family mystery is revealed.

The Missing Girl and the second book, Jessa Is Back, are placed right in the midst of “the good old days” and serve as a reminder of the unabashed nature and danger of white supremacy in the 1950s. These provide us an opportunity to examine the parallels in events unfolding today





Review

Historical books really give you a sense of how far we have come as people and some make you really question the morals of people of the past and honestly it's quite disheartening.

Jessa is in a dire situation and it was so sad to read, but I really think stories like this also provide hope.

For me this had characters that were wonderful and you feel like you’re living right along side them through the good and the bad.

I do plan to read the next in the series as soon as I get a chance!


 

Also in the Series


Historical Fiction

Date Published: Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Publisher: Peanut Butter Publishing


 

Jessa is a different person when she returns to her hometown.

The integrated schools in Oregon allowed her to form a friendship with a Black girl, and now she sees the local Jim Crow practices in Tennessee with new eyes. Supported by her Oregon relatives, she becomes an advocate not only for the inclusion of music throughout the school system of Radford, but also for friendships that cross racial lines. While she becomes a gadfly to the school board, her interactions with other members of her town precipitate crises that uncover support for her position as well as staunch opposition.

In the South, and also in the rest of the country, a long road stretches from the 1950s to the present, and we must judge how well we have lived up to the vision that Jessa’s discovery of interracial friendship revealed to her.


Contact Links

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Purchase Links

The Missing Girl on Amazon

Jessa is Back on Amazon

 

 

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