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'This breathtaking collection is a marvel.' Tayari Jones 'Astute, brilliantly observed, timeless:' Jackie Kay 'Her precocious and brilliant talent hasn't aged at all.' Damon Galgut 'Exquisite ... These stories are all gems.' Mendez 'You hold your breath, completely at her mercy.' Lucy Caldwell And she was becoming frightened too, looking at all those white faces pressed against the windowpanes. One Black family comes under attack as their little boy prepares to start at an all-white school. Friends plan a protest sit-in at the Rose Crest Tea Room, only to be arrested. The first Black student -…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
'This breathtaking collection is a marvel.' Tayari Jones 'Astute, brilliantly observed, timeless:' Jackie Kay 'Her precocious and brilliant talent hasn't aged at all.' Damon Galgut 'Exquisite ... These stories are all gems.' Mendez 'You hold your breath, completely at her mercy.' Lucy Caldwell And she was becoming frightened too, looking at all those white faces pressed against the windowpanes. One Black family comes under attack as their little boy prepares to start at an all-white school. Friends plan a protest sit-in at the Rose Crest Tea Room, only to be arrested. The first Black student - always the 'Experiment' - retreats into her closet at a newly integrated college. And when a social worker enters a secluded woodland cabin, she meets the fate of all visitors . . . Tragically killed aged twenty-two in 1966, Diane Oliver's masterly stories resonate today with renewed urgency. Steeped in the nightmarish horror of life for the Black community in the Jim Crow-era American South, these chilling tales explore toxic racism and the human toll of activism for 'the cause' with heartbreaking empathy and wisdom. Depicting African American families whole and broken, daily injustices and life-threatening political struggle, Neighbors restores a lost star to the twentieth-century literary canon.

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Autorenporträt
Diane Oliver was born in Charlotte, North Carolina and after graduating from high school, she attended Women’s College (which later became the University of North Carolina at Greensboro) and was the Managing Editor of The Carolinian, the student newspaper. She published four short stories in her lifetime and three more posthumously: ‘Key to the City’ and ‘Neighbors’ published in The Sewanee Review in 1966; ‘Health Service’, ‘Traffic Jam’ and ‘Mint Juleps Not Served Here’ published in Negro Digest in 1965, 1966 and 1967 respectively; ‘The Closet on the Top Floor’ published in Southern Writing in the Sixties in 1966; and ‘“No Brown Sugar in Anybody’s Milk”’ published in The Paris Review in 2023. ‘Neighbors’ was a recipient of an O. Henry Award in 1967. Diane began graduate work at the University of Iowa’s Writers’ Workshop and was awarded the MFA degree posthumously days after her death, at the age of 22, in a motorcycle accident in 1966.