Cora's Kitchen, Paperback by Brown, Kimberly Garrett, Like New Used, Free shi...

$ 10.36

Author: Kimberly Garrett Brown Item Length: 8.2 in height: 0.5 in Topic: African American / Contemporary Women, African American / Historical, Literary Language: English Book Title: Cora's Kitchen Item Width: 5.5 in Format: Trade Paperback Item Height: 0.5 in Item Weight: 16 Oz ISBN: 9781771338516 Genre: Fiction Publisher: Inanna Publications & Education, Incorporated width: 5.5 in Number of Pages: 176 Pages Publication Year: 2022

Description

Cora's Kitchen, Paperback by Brown, Kimberly Garrett, Like New Used, Free shi.... She even reveals her secret desire to write. Langston responds, encouraging Cora to enter a writing contest sponsored by the National Urban League, and ignites her dream of being a writer. Cora is frustrated with the writing process, and her willingness to help her cousin Agnes keep her job after she is brutally beaten by her husband lands Cora in a white woman's kitchen working as a cook. Cora's Kitchen, Paperback by Brown, Kimberly Garrett, ISBN 1771338512, ISBN-13 9781771338516, Like New Used, Free shipping in the US It is 1928 and Cora James, a 35-year-old Black librarian who works at the 135th Street library in Harlem, writes Langston Hughes a letter after identifying with one of his poems. She even reveals her secret desire to write. Langston responds, encouraging Cora to enter a writing contest sponsored by the National Urban League, and ignites her dream of being a writer. Cora is frustrated with the writing process, and her willingness to help her cousin Agnes keep her job after she is brutally beaten by her husband lands Cora in a white woman's kitchen working as a cook. In the Fitzgerald home, Cora discovers she has time to write and brings her not to work. When she comforts Mrs. Fitzgerald after an argument with Mr. Fitzgerald, a friendship forms. Mrs. Fitzgerald insists Cora call her Eleanor and gives her The Awakening by Kate Chopin to read. Cora is inspired by the conversation to write a story and sends it to Langston. Eventually she begins to question her life and marriage and starts to write another story about a woman's sense of self. Through a series of letters, and startling developments in her dealings with the white family, Cora's journey to becoming a writer takes her to the brink of losing everything, including her life.