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⇒ Read The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books

The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books



Download As PDF : The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books

Download PDF The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books


The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books

Set in 1946, this beautifully written novel brings to vivid life the days of rigid racial segregation in the deep South. When Regina Mary Robichard leaves New York en route to Revere, Mississippi, determined to bring to trial the murderer of a black soldier coming home from service in Italy during World War II, she’s eager to get justice for the cruel crime against a young war hero guilty only of being black and feels ready for the prejudice she knows she’ll encounter. A black woman with a law degree from Columbia University, just having passed the New York bar exam, she works as a law clerk for Thurgood Marshall, then head of the NAACP Legal Defense Office. Her background has prepared her for the task she’s undertaking. Her father was killed before her birth, lynched in Omaha, Nebraska, after which her mother became an ardent activist for Negro rights. Regina has begged to take the case because of the letter addressed to Thurgood Marshall that has come about the case, a letter signed by M. P. Calhoun, a name Regina recognizes as that of the author of a children’s book titled The Secret of Magic, a book she read and cherished in her childhood. But even before her arrival in Revere, Regina begins to experience cultural shock, and that experience is only heightened by what will befall her in Revere and in her encounter with Mary Pickett Calhoun. This uncompromising account of the cruelties of segregation and the power wielded by the Ku Klux Klan, intimidating even fair-minded white folk into keeping silent about white on black crimes, is told with a lyrical beauty that enchants even as it horrifies by its revelations of the inhumanity of one race toward another. This is a novel that needs to be read and studied in book clubs and classrooms, and the author has included questions for discussion in these settings.

Read The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books

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The Secret of Magic Deborah Johnson Books Reviews


While some of the plot is too contrived, and predictable, the ending leaves one wondering about what happened to Willy Willy. Many of the characters are one dimensional, Willy Willy is more complex and developed. However, it is a quick read and reasonably enjoyable if you are not looking for a complex story with multi-faceted characters. It does makes you realize how challenging a period of time it was for everybody post WW II when black soldiers were returning to a segregated community after experiencing reasonable equality in the service.
The Secret of Magic is full of rich history, intrigue and smooth storytelling. The story begins with a slow and mellow bus ride. The road becomes rocky outside Aliceville, Alabama as Deborah Johnson takes readers back to Revere, Mississippi - home of racial tension and injustices. This time, the characters evolve from a dark children's book where murder, mystery and mayhem abound.

Thurgood Marshall comes on the scene - cool and strong. His down-to-earth presence is easily felt and heard. I looked up from my book several times because I felt the story transported me back in time to the office of history's prominent Justice. He was so real in the story; I was mesmerized and read in awe.

There are secrets and magic throughout the novel, and the author takes her time delivering pieces of a story that will keep you spellbound. This is another MUST READ by Deborah Johnson.
I greatly enjoyed this captivating novel of life, racism and the workings of the law in the post-war South. In 1946, a decorated young war veteran is killed during his return home to Revere, Mississippi. At the request of the employer of his grief-stricken father, Regina, a black female law student working under the wings of a young Thurgood Marshall, seeks to solve the mystery of the soldier's death. In her search for justice, a naïve Regina takes her first foray to the segregated south where she finds that the mythical secrets of this small town may actually be based more on fact than fiction. I thoroughly enjoyed the vivid imagery which envelopes you in an atmosphere where you feel like you're sitting on a porch in the midst of the sweltering south, sipping sweet tea in the mystical world of "The Secret of Magic." The author's lyrical cadence gives us a peek into the inner workings of the social order of the Jim Crow south. Her use of a unique "book-within-a-book" storytelling style weaves together a complex cast of characters who co-exist in a segregationist world on the cusp of the Civil Rights era. I was captivated by the many twists, turns and elements of surprise. As has become the norm with books based in the south about relationships among blacks and white, some have compared this book to "The Help." Other than the locale and segregationist atmosphere, I find absolutely no comparison. This is an excellent read.
Regina is a strong heroine in the 1950s fighting for social justice, and unravelling a mystery at the same time. This novel was a great read. The magic in the title comes from a book Regina read as a child, where black and white children played together in peace, and it inspired her to try to to change her world. I loved the metaphor, as well as the story itself.
Set in 1946, this beautifully written novel brings to vivid life the days of rigid racial segregation in the deep South. When Regina Mary Robichard leaves New York en route to Revere, Mississippi, determined to bring to trial the murderer of a black soldier coming home from service in Italy during World War II, she’s eager to get justice for the cruel crime against a young war hero guilty only of being black and feels ready for the prejudice she knows she’ll encounter. A black woman with a law degree from Columbia University, just having passed the New York bar exam, she works as a law clerk for Thurgood Marshall, then head of the NAACP Legal Defense Office. Her background has prepared her for the task she’s undertaking. Her father was killed before her birth, lynched in Omaha, Nebraska, after which her mother became an ardent activist for Negro rights. Regina has begged to take the case because of the letter addressed to Thurgood Marshall that has come about the case, a letter signed by M. P. Calhoun, a name Regina recognizes as that of the author of a children’s book titled The Secret of Magic, a book she read and cherished in her childhood. But even before her arrival in Revere, Regina begins to experience cultural shock, and that experience is only heightened by what will befall her in Revere and in her encounter with Mary Pickett Calhoun. This uncompromising account of the cruelties of segregation and the power wielded by the Ku Klux Klan, intimidating even fair-minded white folk into keeping silent about white on black crimes, is told with a lyrical beauty that enchants even as it horrifies by its revelations of the inhumanity of one race toward another. This is a novel that needs to be read and studied in book clubs and classrooms, and the author has included questions for discussion in these settings.
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