Current:Home > reviewsBook excerpt: "Let Us Descend" by Jesmyn Ward -ValueMetric
Book excerpt: "Let Us Descend" by Jesmyn Ward
View
Date:2025-04-12 20:30:11
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
"Let Us Descend" (Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, part of Paramount Global), the latest novel from two-time National Book Award-winner Jesmyn Ward, is thick with ghosts, history and searing poetry, in its dramatic story about an enslaved Black girl in the American South, a descendant of a warrior in Africa.
Read an excerpt below.
"Let Us Descend" by Jesmyn Ward
$20 at AmazonPrefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Try Audible for freeThe first weapon I ever held was my mother's hand. I was a small child then, soft at the belly. On that night, my mother woke me and led me out to the Carolina woods, deep, deep into the murmuring trees, black with the sun's leaving. The bones in her fingers: blades in sheaths, but I did not know this yet. We walked until we came to a small clearing around a lightning-burnt tree, far from my sire's rambling cream house that sits beyond the rice fields. Far from my sire, who is as white as my mother is dark. Far from this man who says he owns us, from this man who drives my mother to a black thread in the dim closeness of his kitchen, where she spends most of her waking hours working to feed him and his two paunchy, milk-sallow children. I was bird-boned, my head brushing my mother's shoulder. On that night long ago, my mother knelt in the fractured tree's roots and dug out two long, thin limbs: one with a tip carved like a spear, the other wavy as a snake, clumsily hewn.
"Take this," my mother said, throwing the crooked limb to me. "I whittled it when I was small."
I missed it, and the jagged staff clattered to the ground. I picked it up and held it so tight the knobs from her hewing cut, and then my mother bought her own dark limb down. She had never struck me before, not with her hands, not with wood. Pain burned my shoulder, then lanced through the other.
"This one," she grunted, her voice low under her weapon's whistling, "was my mama's." Her spear was a black whip in the night. I fell. Crawled backward, scrambling under the undergrowth that encircled that ruined midnight room. My mother stalked. My mother spoke aloud as she hunted me in the bush. She told me a story: "This our secret. Mine and your'n. Can't nobody steal this from us." I barely breathed, crouching down further. The wind circled and glanced across the trees.
"You the granddaughter of a woman warrior. She was married to the Fon king, given by her daddy because he had so many daughters, and he was rich. The king had hundreds of warrior wives. They guarded him, hunted for him, fought for him." She poked the bush above me. "The warrior wives was married to the king, but the knife was they husband, the cutlass they lover. You my child, my mama's child. My mother, the fighter—her name was Azagueni, but I called her Mama Aza."
From "Let Us Descend" by Jesmyn Ward. Copyright © 2023 by Jesmyn Ward. Excerpted with permission by Scribner, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Get the book here:
"Let Us Descend" by Jesmyn Ward
$20 at Amazon $25 at Barnes & NobleBuy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
- "Let Us Descend" by Jesmyn Ward (Scribner), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Kansas City Chiefs CEO's Daughter Ava Hunt Hospitalized After Falling Down a Mountain
- Violence clouds the last day of campaigning for Mexico’s election
- US District Judge Larry Hicks dies after being struck by vehicle near Nevada courthouse
- North Korea flies hundreds of balloons full of trash over South Korea
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Nearly 3 out of 10 children in Afghanistan face crisis or emergency level of hunger in 2024
- 'Evening the match': Melinda French Gates to give $1 billion to women's rights groups
- Chinese national charged with operating 'world’s largest botnet' linked to billions in cybercrimes
- The 'Rebel Ridge' trailer is here: Get an exclusive first look at Netflix movie
- Officer who arrested Scottie Scheffler criticizes attorney but holds ‘no ill will’ toward golfer
Ranking
- RFK Jr. grilled again about moving to California while listing New York address on ballot petition
- Syrian President Bashar Assad visits Iran to express condolences over death of Raisi
- Early results in South Africa’s election put ruling ANC below 50% and short of a majority
- Families reclaim the remains of 15 recently identified Greek soldiers killed in Cyprus in 1974
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- A flurry of rockets will launch from Florida's Space Coast this year. How to watch Friday
- Sweden seeks to answer worried students’ questions about NATO and war after its neutrality ends
- US Treasury official visits Ukraine to discuss sanctions on Moscow and seizing Russian assets
Recommendation
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Lab-grown meat isn’t on store shelves yet, but some states have already banned it
Syrian President Bashar Assad visits Iran to express condolences over death of Raisi
Early results in South Africa’s election put ruling ANC below 50% and short of a majority
Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
Edmunds: The best used vehicles for young drivers under $20,000
Usher, Victoria Monét will receive prestigious awards from music industry group ASCAP
Families reclaim the remains of 15 recently identified Greek soldiers killed in Cyprus in 1974