Ethel Morgan Smith is author of From Whence Cometh My Help: The African American Community at Hollins College and Reflections of the Other: Being Black in Germany. Her essay "Love Means Nothing" won the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation Prize. "We Ready" was a finalist for the Jeanne M. Lieby Prize and was published in the Florida Review. She has also published in the New York Times, Callaloo, and African American Review. Smith has been a Fulbright Scholar (Universitaet of Tuebingen, Germany); Rockefeller Fellow (Bellagio, Italy); Visiting Artist (American Academy in Rome); and DuPont Fellow (Randolph Macon Women's College).
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Description
Path to Grace weaves together Smith's own experiences in the South with the history of civil rights in America and the personal experiences of those who were closely involved. It is a terrific read--shocking, amusing, enlightening, and mesmerizing, beginning to end.--Jane Smiley, author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction, including A Thousand Acres: A Novel, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1992 Path to Grace is a personal history. A masterful re-envisioning. An intimate portrait of the civil rights movement through the eyes of the folks on the ground. The unsung heroes. This is their story, our story, and it is compelling and powerful and necessary.--Kwame Alexander, New York Times bestselling author of The Undefeated and Why Fathers Cry at Night: A Memoir in Love Poems, Letters, Recipes, and Remembrances Moving, insightful, and personalized, Path to Grace highlights the civil rights efforts of Black Americans who worked to find acceptance and freedom in a society that preferred to hold them down. This inspirational book is a testament to the power of people to change their lives--and the lives of those around them--for the better.--Jeremiah Rood "Foreword Reviews" Path to Grace is a much-needed complement to the history of the civil rights movement, restoring and highlighting many important and unforgettable people who must not remain forgotten, omitted, and unsung.--Daryl Cumber Dance, professor emerita of English at University of Richmond

