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The Seventh Child
Freddie Mae Baxter | Gloria Bley Miller

The Seventh Child

a lucky life

Knopf (Apr 20, 1999)
9780375406201
| Hard Cover with Dust Jacket
248 pages | 150 x 231 mm | American English
Dewey 92
LC Classification F128.68.H3 .B39 1999
LC Control No. 98054109

Genre

  • Biography

Subject

  • African American Women
  • African American Women/ New York (State)/ New York/ Biography
  • African American Women/ South Carolina/ Denmark/ Biography
  • African Americans
  • African Americans/ New York (State)/ New York/ Biography

Plot

Told with the irrepressible warmth and humor of a natural-born storyteller, The Seventh Child is the chronicle of a remarkable woman's life, and of three generations of an African-American family.The seventh of eight children, Freddie Mae Baxter was born in 1923 in rural South Carolina. When her father left the family, her mother had to raise the children alone, and Freddie Mae went to work--first picking cotton, then cooking for the white families in town. At seventeen, she decided to go up North in search of new horizons and a better life.Now, in an astonishingly original voice, Freddie Mae shares with us the wisdom of her seventy-five years, and some vivid memories: from her childhood in the South ("Two cents was money in those days. . .") to her life in Harlem, where she played saxophone in an all-girl band ("We just jammed!") and danced at all the hot clubs ("Anyplace that there was music, you could find me").Through the good times, bad times, and the enormous changes she's lived through, Freddie Mae has remained steadfastly optimistic and emotionally generous. The Seventh Child will take its place alongside our strongest memoirs as an unforgettable American original. As Freddie Mae says, "Let me stay here; I'm doing all right just as I am."