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The Prophets
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
A singular and stunning debut novel about the forbidden union between two enslaved young men on a Deep South plantation, the refuge they find in each other, and a betrayal that threatens their existence Isaiah was Samuel's and Samuel was Isaiah's. That was the way it was since the beginning, and the way it was to be until the end. In the barn they tended to the animals, but also to each other, transforming the hollowed-out shed into a place of human refuge, a source of intimacy and hope in a world ruled by vicious masters. But when an older man--a fellow slave--seeks to gain favor by preaching the master's gospel on the plantation, the enslaved begin to turn on their own. Isaiah and Samuel's love, which was once so simple, is seen as sinful and a clear danger to the plantation's harmony. With a lyricism reminiscent of Toni Morrison, Robert Jones, Jr., fiercely summons the voices of slaver and enslaved alike, from Isaiah and Samuel to the calculating slave master to the long line of women that surround them, women who have carried the soul of the plantation on their shoulders. As tensions build and the weight of centuries--of ancestors and future generations to come--culminates in a climactic reckoning, The Prophets masterfully reveals the pain and suffering of inheritance, but is also shot through with hope, beauty, and truth, portraying the enormous, heroic power of love.
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marleed
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

What a beautifully written, heart-wrenching book. Many characters are given and the reason for that all comes together as the story resolves. Love and how it gets suppressed. Hate and how it‘s given power. I just can‘t imagine waking up everyday when those are both personal realities in the everyday of a lifetime.

76 likes1 stack add
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Jilly6183
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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A poetic and profound story that is not a simple or traditional story of slavery in the deep south, but is a rich telling of ancestry, inherited and shared traumas, and how love and survival can make us do things we never thought possible, both good and bad.

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Olivia306
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

How this book broke my heart! How poetic its writing is and how the enduring love of Isaiah and Samuel shines on every page! Mr Jones Jr manages to create a vivid world, a non-linear timeline full of pain and brutality, but in which love also permeates all existence. It‘s an absolutely brilliant book - Tony Morisson and James Baldwin (Mr Jones‘s literary heroes) would be proud. Exquisite and profound, it still haunts me.

10 likes1 stack add
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AnneCecilie
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

The Two of Them - Isaiah and Samuel. They dared to love each other.

A plantation in the South, by the owners called Elizabeth Plantation, by the slaves called Empty. And Isaiah and Samuel, they are two of the many slaves. Two of the many viewpoints we get in this story, both slaves and owners. But somehow we always end up with The Two of Them.

One day one of the slaves are allowed to preach God‘s word and this will change everything.

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Mccall0113
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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The first chapter! 🤯. I also tried to get a cute pic of my dog and the book but big baby is scared.

Graywacke He‘s a good sceptic. Cute! 2y
Ladygodiva7 You need to hold a piece of treat or toy on top of your phone and tell them to sit. You‘re welcome! 2y
75 likes2 comments
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Soubhiville
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

“Sometimes you‘ve got to really show your love for a great book by rubbing your face all over it.” -Igor

While this story of two enslaved men in love on a cotton plantation was bound to end in tragedy, it‘s an intense and beautiful journey. I hope there will be more from Jones, lots more, because I loved the unique voice he gave this book. He gives us many points of view and weaves timelines, all around Samuel and Isaiah‘s deep bond.

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Nutmegnc
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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@ozma.of.oz #sundayfunday 1. Goodbye Paradise by Sarina Bowen was the last queer book I finished. Most of my reads these days are queer in some way, including my current read by Jay Bell, Straight Boy. 2. I‘m really looking forward to The Prophets by Robert Jones, Jr. 3. Harper Fox for emotionally powerful stories, Simon James Green for queer YA fun, Garrett Leigh for broody steamy bad boys, Sarah Waters for historical queers.

BookmarkTavern I have heard such good things about The Prophets! Thank you for sharing! 💙 2y
Nutmegnc @ozma.of.oz I‘m a little afraid of needing tissues, but I‘m okay with it, I think. (edited) 2y
35 likes3 comments
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Patchshank
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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"Books Your Astrological Sign Should Read in May"

Posted on penguin random house's insta. ♍♍♍

The Prophets seems interesting, but not the kind of thing I usually read.

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ChaoticMissAdventures
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

"You do not yet know us.
You do not yet understand."
A complex and rich story. There is trauma but also so much love. Jones is a gorgeous storyteller.

Nutmegnc He really is a stunning genius!! 3y
25 likes1 comment
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AlizaApp
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

A beautifully written, but also devastating novel, about a two young enslaved men in love on a Mississippi plantation. The points of view also cover the perspectives from other enslaved people as well as some of the others on the plantation.

33 likes1 stack add
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Amor4Libros
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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This book is 🔥🔥🔥!!! Still have about 200 pages to go, but I did not see any of this stuff coming.

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Amor4Libros
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Next up….Looking forward to this one, even though I feel it‘s going to be gut wrenching, but that seems to be my reading mood lately.

27 likes1 stack add
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swynn
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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The reading gods have smiled on me this month with some fantastic reads, but they saved the best for (almost) last. This is a historical novel set on an antebellum cotton plantation, where two enslaved men have an emotional and physical relationship. Given the time and place it cannot end well, and Jones's chronicle of the tragedy is layered, nuanced, poetic, and gut-wrenching. This book, y'all

This was my January #BookSpin pick
@TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Great progress!! 3y
37 likes1 comment
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swynn
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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My #BookSpin and #DoubleSpin reads for January: a literary drama and a pulpy romp. (Bet you can guess which is which.) Looking forward to both.

Thanks @TheAromaofBooks !

TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! Good luck!!! 3y
32 likes1 comment
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Smartykate
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
Pickpick

My favorite book of 2021 - still hard to believe it‘s a first novel. The scope is huge, spanning centuries and continents, but Jones‘s control is masterful. Relationships are beautifully developed, and the descriptive language is compelling.

Nute Welcome to Litsy! It‘s a warm and friendly community. I know that you will enjoy yourself here. I‘m looking forward to getting to know you!🙂
Check out #LitsyEvents for a varied listing of fun-related happenings within this neighborhood of fellow readers.🤗
3y
1 like1 comment
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Hooked_on_books
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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I love the idea of this story, of love between two enslaved men which is true and beautiful. But for the first 3/4, I struggled to connect with it. I thought the final 1/4 was terrific, so I‘m giving it a pick, but if not for this being on the 2021 NBA list, I‘m not sure I would‘ve stuck with it.

TrishB I was recommended this by a friend the other day. I may wait for an offer. 3y
Librariana I just picked up one of the finalists yesterday! 3y
Hooked_on_books @Librariana I have that one on hold at my library, but the queue is SO long I may break and buy it. Part of me would like to get the finalists in fiction read before awards day, which is doable if I buy that one. 3y
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Librariana @Hooked_on_books Will they announce the winner on November 17th? 3y
Hooked_on_books @Librariana Yes! I‘m excited, though I‘ll still read them all. My hold for CCL is 20 weeks away, though, so that‘s not until next year! I‘ve read the tagged (obviously) and Hell of a Book already. And I have Zorrie. My hold for Matrix is 4 weeks out, so there‘s a chance I can read them all before the big day. 3y
Hooked_on_books @Librariana Exciting update! My library does 7 day “skip the line” loans of ebooks and I was able to snatch up Cloud Cuckoo tonight! So I shall be reading it this week!! 🥳 3y
Librariana @Hooked_on_books Yay!! I love it when I stumble upon those! I'm so glad you found one 😁😊💜📚 I'm very tempted to throw caution to the wind, put all other books aside, and start reading this one, too since it's QUITE the tome. 3y
49 likes1 stack add7 comments
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Chelsea.Poole
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

Heart wrenching. A difficult read, both because of the horrific content and the lyrical writing style which is lovely, but also nonlinear which was challenging. And it‘s long. I did love the beautiful relationship between Samuel and Isaiah and the flashes from Africa, which I believe to be ancestors of the enslaved, though I never understood if it was a direct lineage. Jones admires Toni Morrison, and this definitely felt like one of hers.

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Kazzie
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
Pickpick

This book was challenging. But so beautifully written, poetic. Queer historical stories are so necessary

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rachelsbrittain
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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New book haul!

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Jen2
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

That was one hell of a story!!!!

58 likes1 stack add
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StellaDz
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Mehso-so

A confused review as I‘m confused. A story of finding love over cruelty, and having the main LGBTQ lovers as slaves on a plantation is really the first I‘ve ever seen written in a novel. But what made it beautiful also made it bad: it was artistic and poignant, wonderfully written, but it was so full of metaphors and allegories, at times I was lost. It‘s not plot driven, a shot in time, but that made it seem listless, going nowhere. A kind ⭐️⭐️⭐️

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StellaDz
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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A DIY patio and a kiddie pool, help to beat this heat!

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Cathyloves2read
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
Mehso-so

Im really not sure how I feel about this book. The subject matter was powerful.The writing was superb,it was poetic. My issue is that there were so many times while where I wasn‘t sure what I was reading about.I had to try to figure out what was going on, even then I wasn‘t sure if I was right.This may be one of those books you need to read more than once. While I‘ve always appreciated poetry, I‘ll admit that I don‘t really understand most of it.

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Sydneypaige
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

Brutality set against love. The first gay relationship I have ever read of enslaved people.
I think I missed correlations and meanings the author intended by titling the chapters Bible chapter names, but it did not get in the way of my appreciation of the story and different perspectives in which the story is told in.

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Redwritinghood
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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This was a brutal yet beautiful book about the lives of the people on a southern plantation just before the Civil War. The enslaved people there struggle to live the best life they can, sometimes finding some respite, but mostly confronted with cruelty. It is a tragic love story in a different vein. The book did devolve into some overly ornate language at times and the narrative could have used some tightening, but overall a great debut. 4⭐️

BarbaraBB Hi Jerrie, just checking in. Hope all is well 🤍 3y
54 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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Well-ReadNeck
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

I listened to this one on #audiobook and absolutely loved this amazing debut.

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Bertha_Mason
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.

"There were many ways to hide and save one‘s self from doom, and keeping tender secrets was one of them. It seemed to Maggie a suicidal act to make a precious thing plain."

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Megabooks
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Thank you so much for sending this book, Cindy!! I feel bad having it knowing that you haven‘t read it yet. I‘ll gladly send it to you when I‘m done! Anyway, very much looking forward to reading it, especially since I don‘t have #botm anymore! 😘💕

Also thank you for the postcard, which I found after taking this picture. 😂😂

Cinfhen Enjoy my friend xx I‘ll probably end up listening on audio 😊my headspace wasn‘t allowing me to read this one XX but I‘ll be very excited to hear your thoughts 4y
Megabooks @Cinfhen awesome! I should get to it soon. Just sent you an email. 💕 4y
100 likes1 stack add2 comments
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KadeLexical
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.

Puah knew that the secret of strength was in how much truth could be endured

3 likes1 stack add
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LaraReads
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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My #doublespin book is going to have to be a DNF for now. I got a little over 1/3 of the way through and had to pause. It is very good, but very dense. And hard to read/listen. While I enjoyed it, I am not in the right reading mindset at the moment. So I‘ll think about it & try again at a later time.

TheAromaofBooks I love the phrase I see around Litsy about “hibernating“ a book. Sometimes it's just what needs to happen!! 4y
LaraReads @TheAromaofBooks yes! I love that! 4y
32 likes2 comments
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emmaturi
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

Such a wonderful book! But also a hard read! I haven't read many books on slavery to be honest, but in March I read Kindred by Octavis Butler. Two young slaves Isaiah and Samuel have a relationship, live in the barn, but suddenly their relationship is thrust out into the open in a way that people start to notice. We hear POVs from all the characters and also go to an African country and see how they are taken back to America. Powerful read! #books

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DimeryRene
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

LinesUponAPage Cute little dog. What kind is he?
4y
DimeryRene @Lifeisasnap Aussie and Rottie mix. Will get a better picture for my next post. 🐶 4y
LinesUponAPage Can‘t wait to see! I have a Border Aussie! 4y
13 likes3 comments
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Pinta
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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(Bodily) Samuel saying (a first, uncertain) good-bye to Isaiah... “He and Isaiah had stumbled into something he had never exactly seen before.” The cruel logic of the toubab: “They worked people until their empty hands were twisted, bleeding, and could do no more, then called them lazy... They kidnapped babies and shattered families and then called them incapable of love.” The calling & recalling & reclaiming of names, souls, personhood, of love.

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Pinta
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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“Truth could be known as long as it wasn‘t spoken.” Adam‘s moment of connection with his father/owner, the emotion of the son, anger & confusion of the enslaved. Chapter more powerful having just read the same incident from slaveowner POV. Recognizing family in the forehead of a drunken, raggedy Paul... “Since Paul had said ‘us‘ like they were actually kin, perhaps a sliver could be made into a gap.” Blood. Kin despite themselves. Inbetweenness.

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Pinta
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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“What it feel like... to have each other?” 💜The beauty of Isaiah & Samuel‘s love, recognized by all as beyond the beyond until Amos in his newfound religious fervor labels it unclean. The delicacy & strength. This couple, their physical & emotional compatibility, their perfection & fortune in finding each other. “He envied Isaiah and Samuel. Willingness radiated off of them in heat. ...How blessed Adam felt to be a witness to pure intention!”

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Pinta
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

Lush & lyrical language to depict plantation life in both natural beauty & habitual horrors. Love story between enslaved Isaiah & Samuel is so tenderly depicted, I would have titled “The Two of Them.” Not sure the prophet voices or passages back to precolonial Kosongo territory weave in quite right, but adds to lineage of trauma, memory, & magic. Prose sometimes drippingly evocative, but unforgettable. Nature. Ancestry. Darkness & light. 2021

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Cinfhen
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Up next... so I can send it off to my lovely friend @Megabooks who will need to rearrange her shelves once more 😉

Megabooks Thanks friend! 💜💜💜 I hope you like it as much as The Push! 4y
88 likes1 comment
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rmaclean4
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

Brutal, beautiful. Exquisite writing. What a debut novel. Echoes of Morrison, Cotes, and Walker. I think this will win a lot of literature prizes. Highly recommend! 4.5 🌟

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NikkiCureton
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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“You don‘t never get tired, ‘Zay? Tired of baggy for your life? Everything you do—the way you smile, the way you walk, where you look and don‘t look—just another way of begging for your life. You don‘t never get tired?”

Such a beautifully written book.

4 likes1 stack add
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Nathan_Opland-Dobs
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

⭐️

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EchoCharlie
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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My library hold is ready! Super excited for this one

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Aswenson
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Great read. I get lost in the language sometimes, but overall enjoying it.

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UnabridgedPod
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Pickpick

Buddy reads are always amazing, but the buddy read for Robert Jones, Jr.'s The Prophets reached another level. This book is brilliant and layered and gorgeous and, at times, a hard read (both because of its content but also because it's difficult). I did a blend of reading the ebook and listening to the audiobook; the latter can sometimes interfere with the depth of my comprehension, ⬇️

UnabridgedPod but here the narrator, Karen Chilton, is so phenomenal that I am so glad to have listened to more than half of the book.

The Prophets focuses on a plantation known as Empty. As you might guess from that detail, naming here is incredibly significant: many names of the enslaved people are drawn from the Bible, but there are also names drawn from their ancestors that hold great meaning for the people. ⬇️
4y
UnabridgedPod The book centers on Isaiah and Samuel, two young enslaved men who love each other and whose sexual commitment to each other defies the will and the agenda of the plantation's owners, who see them as valuable property who should contribute to their wealth as breeders Isaiah and Samuel's story winds through the narration of a multitude of other characters: enslaved women who have been forced to bear the master's children; ⬇️ 4y
UnabridgedPod enslaved men who are willing to embrace a corrupt vision of religion to hold on to what they think is theirs; the owners whose malice and selfishness have rotted any speck of kindness they might have had; their son whose self-identified "nobility" leads to a horrible offense that he reads as beneficence. ⬇️ 4y
UnabridgedPod The Prophets is a book that is powerful and heartbreaking and hopeful, one in which love can't be enough and yet, somehow, is—it's just not the type of enough I wanted it to be. This is a book that I will re-read, knowing that it will still hold rewards I haven't yet found. 4y
23 likes4 comments
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Mitch
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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Look what just arrived. Thank you so so much - can‘t wait to read this. Thank you @Gracelovesreading so very much. Happy Valentines 😘

#bookcupidswap

candority Two books? That‘s awesome! 😍 4y
Gracelovesreading Yay! Have fun reading it. Glad you like it. 😊👍 4y
84 likes2 comments
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Nutmegnc
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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I am so looking forward to this book. But with an ounce of ‘let me gird my loins‘. Photo is shared from the author‘s insta.

sprainedbrain It‘s a fantastic book! 4y
Nutmegnc @sprainedbrain I hear such amazing things. 4y
21 likes2 comments
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DimeryRene
The Prophets | Robert Jones, Jr.
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#blackhistorymonth I‘ve only just started, but the language is captivating. #weneeddiversebooks 🤍💙💛

luvlee68 i saw this as a choice on BOTM and passed over it because i was just unsure , i may just give it a try , adding to my tbr stack 4y
24 likes2 stack adds1 comment