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Trinity

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The Hurston-Wright Award Finalist makes her long-awaited return with this electrifying saga—as moving and indelible as The Twelve Tribes of Hattie, The Turner House, and The Love Songs of W. E. B. DuBois—that explores three generations of a family trying to overcome trials and trauma and free themselves from the darkness of the past.

Lottie Rebecca Lee is spoken into the world in Fayetteville, North Carolina by a Black nurse who declares, "Lord Jesus, if that ain't the blackest little baby born this side of heaven." Later, Lottie will prove that she is the ancestors' promise to unearth the Mississippi and Ghanaian atrocities that have tormented Benjamin Lee, her grandfather who was born during the Great Depression in Mississippi's red clay tobacco fields, and Benjamin Junior, his son and Lottie Rebecca's father, born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, where the post Korean War GI Bill promises prosperity. These two generations of men are haunted by the Mother-Spirit who did not survive enslavement's post-traumatic stress violence. Trinity is the riveting story of the daughter-spirit born to stitch love back into the scattered wombs of her Black mothers and call love back into the fishing blues songs of her Black male kin. Lottie Rebecca Lee is the Divine spirited daughter born to set everything back up right again, in this daringly original novel.

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    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2023

      A Hurston-Wright finalist for The Fifth Born, Lockhart returns with the story of Lottie Rebecca Lee, a North Carolina Black girl born as her family's daughter-spirit and primed both to plumb the suffering of her grandfather and father and to heal all three generations of her family. With a 50,000-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 22, 2023
      Lockhart (Fifth Born) chronicles a family’s generational trauma and a spiritual intervention in her intense latest. Benjamin and Lenard Lee are raised in 1940s Mississippi, where they work as field hands for their abusive father, Old Deddy. Their mother, Lottie, tells Benjamin when he’s 13 of her plans to leave and earn enough money to rescue the brothers from their father. Angry and distraught, Benjamin shoots and kills her. The boys’ paths diverge from there: Lenard eventually follows their half brother James to Missouri and becomes a teacher, while Benjamin, now a Korean War veteran, repeats Old Deddy’s abuse on his wife and their son, B.J. Later, B.J. leaves to fight in Vietnam, a war he survives but which wreaks havoc on his psyche and his ability to connect with his wife, Sheila. The Lees’ pain is witnessed by a generations-old spirit, which has also seen their ancestors’ enslavement. When B.J. and Sheila have a daughter, Lottie Rebecca, the spirit is born with her. Lottie Rebecca’s precocious wisdom makes it difficult for her to bond with others until a cathartic trip to her great-grandparents’ Mississippi home, which reveals to her the best way to begin healing the family’s wounds. Lockhart skillfully untangles the long-term effects of violence, trauma, and the history of enslavement on the family. This is not to be missed.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2023
      From the time she's 6 years old, Lottie Rebecca Lee, the namesake of both her grandmother and great-grandmother, is haunted by the spirits of seven generations of ancestors as she struggles to make sense of her family's intergenerational trauma. From a young age, Lottie Rebecca says, she knew that what she "was experiencing about living and what other people were experiencing were different dimensions of remembering." Lottie Rebecca's visions begin with her great-great-great grandmother's capture by slave traders in the Congo and move on to the hot Mississippi tobacco fields where her grandfather Bennie grew up under the violent hand of his father, "Old Deddy," and his desperate mother, Lottie, who danced at Mr. Genorette's tavern as she tried to save enough money to escape their plight. Lottie Rebecca also observes the experiences of Bennie and his son, B.J., her father, during the Korean and Vietnam wars and the hidden battles with PTSD, violence, and addiction that follow them home. Tracing the family's trauma through the decades and the path to healing through storytelling, the novel recalls Octavia Butler's Kindred in its innovative approach to time and its rendering of history in ways that are immediate to the modern reader and Toni Morrison's Beloved in its exploration of haunting, trauma, and family identity. The novel seems to embody the past more fully than it does the present, though, and as a result loses some of its narrative power as it arrives at its hopeful yet somewhat attenuated conclusion. While the novel does remain cohesive, more of the urgency that characterized its beginning would have propelled it from being very good to great. A challenging yet inspiring portrait of the resilience of Black families.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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