In the Neighborhood of True, by Susan Kaplan Carlton (2019)
In the Neighborhood of True is a coming-of-age novel set in 1958 Atlanta, Georgia. Ruth Robb’s father recently died, so her mother packs Ruth, her sister Nattie, and they move from New York City to Atlanta, Georgia to live in her grandparent’s guest house. Ruth’s mother grew up in Atlanta society and was Queen of the Magnolia Ball, as well as a handful of other balls. Ruth’s grandmother, Fontaine, is all set to send her granddaughters into the debutante season.
Atlanta society is white and Protestant. Ruth’s late father was Jewish and Ruth’s mother converted. Ruth and her sister have been raised Jewish. This would be a stumbling block to enter Atlanta society. Ruth and her sister attend the private school, Covenant, that was established after the ruling in Brown v. Education, so it wasn’t subject to integration.
Ruth quickly falls in the popular girls and learns Southern etiquette from the little pink pamphlet her grandmother has given her. She decides to keep the fact that she is Jewish a secret so she can be accepted with her new friends. She also falls hard for Davis Jefferson, the handsome young classmate. He is attracted to her, too.
Ruth and her mother come to an agreement, that Ruth can go to school dances provided she attend Shabbos services on Saturday mornings. The rabbi at the local synagogue is pushing for civil rights. Ruth is walking a fine line between her religious upbring and her desire to fit in with her classmates.
Ruth is aware of the violence towards Blacks and learns about the lynching of Leo Frank in the early 1900s. As the story leads to an act of violent antisemitism, Ruth is faced with a moral dilemma.
This story was based on an actual act of antisemitism that occurred in October 1958 in Atlanta, Georgia. Although 60 years have lapsed since, antisemitism is on the rise. Many synagogues in the South have police protection during Friday and Saturday services. The attitudes and events of this novel could conceivably occur today.
Read: May 26, 2021
5 Stars
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