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Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

Literary fiction

Salvage the Bones

by Jesmyn Ward

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The award-winning story of a young girl and her brothers, who band together to survive a deadly hurricane nearing their small Mississippi town.

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    Slow build

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    Siblings

Synopsis

They heard it on the radio: A hurricane is coming, threatening the town of Bois Sauvage, Mississippi. Esch's hard-drinking father can feel it in his bones. Esch and her brothers are trying to help prepare, but there are other worries, too. Skeetah is watching his prized pit bull, helpless as her new litter dies one by one. Randall, when not preoccupied with basketball, is busy looking after the youngest, junior. And Esch, fifteen and motherless among men, has just realized that she's pregnant. The children of this family have always been short on nurture, but they are fiercely loyal to one another. It is together that they will face the building storm—and the day that will dawn after.

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Salvage the Bones

THE FIRST DAY: BIRTH IN A BARE BULB PLACE

China’s turned on herself. If I didn’t know, I would think she was trying to eat her paws. I would think that she was crazy. Which she is, in a way. Won’t let nobody touch her but Skeet. When she was a big-headed pit bull puppy, she stole all the shoes in the house, all our black tennis shoes Mama bought because they hide dirt and hold up until they’re beaten soft. Only Mama’s forgotten sandals, thin-heeled and tinted pink with so much red mud seeped into them, looked different. China hid them all under furniture, behind the toilet, stacked them in piles and slept on them. When the dog was old enough to run and trip down the steps on her own, she took the shoes outside, put them in shallow ditches under the house. She’d stand rigid as a pine when we tried to take them away from her. Now China is giving like she once took away, bestowing where she once stole. She is birthing puppies.

What China is doing is nothing like what Mama did when she had my youngest brother, Junior. Mama gave birth in the house she bore all of us in, here in this gap in the woods her father cleared and built on that we now call the Pit. Me, the only girl and the youngest at eight, was of no help, although Daddy said she told him she didn’t need any help. Daddy said that Randall and Skeetah and me came fast, that Mama had all of us in her bed, under her own bare burning bulb, so when it was time for Junior, she thought she could do the same. It didn’t work that way. Mama squatted, screamed toward the end. Junior came out purple and blue as a hydrangea: Mama’s last flower. She touched Junior just like that when Daddy held him over her: lightly with her fingertips, like she was afraid she’d knock the pollen from him, spoil the bloom. She said she didn’t want to go to the hospital. Daddy dragged her from the bed to his truck, trailing her blood, and we never saw her again.

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Celebrate Black History Month
View all
The Vanishing Half
How to Say Babylon
The Attic Child
Transcendent Kingdom
The First Ladies
The Final Revival of Opal & Nev
River Sing Me Home
Isaac’s Song
Razorblade Tears
Sankofa
Maame
Black Cake
Take My Hand
Behold the Dreamers
The Death of Vivek Oji
The Girl with Stars in Her Eyes
The Mothers
What's Mine and Yours
The Mayor of Maxwell Street
The Other Black Girl
Somebody's Daughter
The Girl with the Louding Voice
In Every Mirror She's Black
Before I Let Go
The Prophets
All We Were Promised
Don't Cry for Me
Did You Hear About Kitty Karr?
Let Us Descend
Yinka, Where Is Your Huzband?
An American Marriage
Black Buck
Honey Girl
Salvage the Bones
Someday, Maybe
The Water Dancer
Good Dirt
A Season of Light