Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Eye-opening historical fiction

- — Donna Edwards, Associated Press

Newly graduated from Tuskegee, Civil Townsend takes on her first job as a nurse at the Montgomery Family Planning Clinic in 1973. She’s ready to make a difference and help the women in her community, but her first case tests her in a way that will haunt her for decades to come.

“Take My Hand” by Dolen Perkins-Valdez is engrossing from the start. The novel takes place from Civil’s retrospect­ive look some 40 years back from 2016. Being one of the few nurses with her own reliable transporta­tion, Civil is assigned two rural Alabama girls, India and Erica Williams, who are receiving birth control shots. From the first time Civil sees them, she is appalled at their living conditions, but she begins to fall in love with them, compelling her to help them any way she can.

It’s only a few months after Roe v. Wade decided women have a right to abortion. It’s also one year after the public learned about the U.S. government’s “Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male.” When Civil’s friends begin to question the birth control shot the nurses are giving to their patients, she discovers that Tuskegee was far from the end of America’s attempts to control Black bodies.

The novel explores the complex psychologi­cal impact of making decisions about reproducti­on or, conversely, having those decisions made for you without consent. It also examines the class separation between Black folks, further dividing and weakening a group of which is already taken advantage.

“Take My Hand” boasts gorgeous design and conversati­onal prose. In her third novel, PerkinsVal­dez showcases her talent and experience through her easy command of voice, plot and pacing.

Throughout the novel, detailed descriptio­ns command rapt attention. Between its sizable length and the immense amount of research and history poured into its more than 350 pages, “Take My Hand” is an excellent example of a Big Ambitious Novel by a 21st-century woman.

Inspired by the real court case Wyatt v. Alderholt, “Take My Hand” is a reminder that it wasn’t just Tuskegee. By dropping the reader first-person into discoverin­g one such offense, you experience the doubt and struggle of noticing something amiss, uncovering truth and finally determinin­g how to move forward.

 ?? ?? ‘Take My Hand’
By Dolen Perkins-Valdez; Berkley, 368 pages, $27.
‘Take My Hand’ By Dolen Perkins-Valdez; Berkley, 368 pages, $27.

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