The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Achilles healing post-surgery, but Kazee will leave Falcons

Topics range from women in history to illegal adoptions.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter darryl.ledbetter@ajc.com

Free safety Damontae Kazee, who is recovering from Achilles surgery, is moving on from the Falcons, his agent told the AJC on Thursday.

Kazee posted a crying-face meme above an empty locker on social media.

The hard-hitting Kazee was injured in the second quarter of the fourth game of the 2020 season, against Green Bay on Oct. 5.

Kazee is set to become a free agent Tuesday, but he wanted to return to the Falcons.

“I’m just waiting to see, hopefully come back to Atlanta,” Kazee told the AJC on March 5. “If not, I can go and play somewhere else; it doesn’t matter. I just want to get back on the football field.”

Kazee, who was a fifthround pick out of San Diego State in 2017, is at the sixmonth mark of his rehab.

He played in 16 games and made one start as a rookie. In 2018, he took over at free safety after Ricardo Allen was injured and ended up tying for the NFL lead with seven intercepti­ons.

In 2019, he started 14 of 16 games and had three intercepti­ons and 74 tackles.

“I’ll be really ready when camp starts,” Kazee said. “I’m ahead right now. I had all of this time to get prepared.”

The Falcons currently have one safety on the roster, rookie Jaylinn Hawkins, and he’s a strong safety.

Keanu Neal and Sharrod Neasman also are set to become free agents. Allen was cut in a salary-cap move.

“He’ll be back,” former Falcons coach Dan Quinn said at the time of Kazee’s injury. “He’s as tough and as rugged as they come.”

In honor of Women’s History Month, consider adding to your reading list these four fascinatin­g new books by — and about — women. Topics include a fresh look at women through history, historical fiction about the immigrant experience, a nonfiction examinatio­n of an illegal adoption agency and a memoir about a troubled mother-daughter relationsh­ip.

‘The Women’s History of the Modern World’

The traditiona­l literary approach to Women’s History Month has been to showcase influentia­l women typically overlooked by the history books, and author Rosalind Miles, founder of the Center for Women’s Studies at Coventry Polytechni­c in England, does some of that here. But what really leaps off the page are her reexaminat­ions of women who have been publicly maligned by history. For instance, popular opinion has cast Harriett Beecher Stowe as a racist for her stereotypi­cal portrayals of Blacks in her 1852 bestsellin­g novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” But according to Miles, Stowe was in fact an outspoken abolitioni­st, and her novel was considered radical at the time for humanizing Black characters and focusing attention on the horrors of slavery. Some attribute her novel to solidifyin­g Northern support

prior to the Civil War, including President Abraham Lincoln, who reportedly greeted her by saying, “So this is the little lady who started this great war.” Another example is Mary Mallon, an Irish immigrant living in New York City christened “Typhoid Mary” by the tabloids in 1906 and accused of causing the pandemic. She spent the last 26 years of her life in prison, where she died, although in truth, Miles writes, two or three deaths were attributed to her. (William Morrow, $14.99)

‘Of Women and Salt’

There’s a lot of buzz among literary circles for this April 6 debut by Gabriela Garcia. Her multigener­ational saga spans three centuries of mothers and daughters, starting with María Isabel, a laborer at a 19th-century cigar factory and the sole caretaker for her dying mother in Cuba. On the other end of the timeline is Jeanette, a recovered drug addict in modern-day Miami who impulsivel­y takes in a young girl who is abandoned when her mother, an immigrant from El Salvador, is detained by ICE. Providing counsel to Jeanette is her mother, Carmen, who has her own problems, including a fractured relationsh­ip with her mother and unresolved issues surroundin­g her immigratio­n from Cuba to the United States, about which she is resolutely

tight-lipped. Curious about her heritage and fed up with her mother’s reticence, Jeanette goes to Cuba to meet her grandmothe­r, and there she discovers Carmen’s secrets. That’s the intriguing setup for this beautifull­y crafted novel that explores the many variables and inequaliti­es that make up the immigrant experience and the role that politics, privilege and skin color plays in the process. (Flatiron Books, $26.99)

‘Before and After’

When Lisa Wingate published her wildly successful 2017 novel “Before We Were Yours,” it’s unlikely she could have imagined the impact it would have. A fictionali­zed story based on real events, the

book delved into the activities of Georgia Tann, who got rich stealing 5,000 babies from unwed mothers and impoverish­ed parents and then selling them to middle- and upperclass families through her Tennessee orphanage and adoption agency from 1924 to 1950. When the book came out, so many readers contacted Wingate to say they were “Tann babies” that a reunion was organized. Co-written by Wingate and Judy Christie, “Before and After” is equal parts heartbreak­ing and inspiratio­nal as it tells the story of that reunion and weaves through it the origin stories of many adoptees who went through the Tennessee Children’s Home Society in Memphis. (Ballantine, $17)

‘The Secret Life of Dorothy Soames’

Atlanta-based author Justine Cowan grew up in Los Angeles believing her mother, Eileen, came from a long line of British blue bloods and possibly even royalty. But Eileen’s hypercriti­cal nature, exacting standards and volatile anger drove a wedge between mother and daughter. The two became so estranged that Cowan ignored her mother’s late-in-life attempt to mend their relationsh­ip by sending a copy of her memoir and an invitation for the two of them to visit London together to explore Eileen’s roots. It wasn’t until Eileen died and Cowan was overcome with grief that she read her mother’s memoir and began looking into Eileen’s past. What Cowan

discovered was the story of an infant reluctantl­y relinquish­ed by her mother to a stern, austere institutio­n where she was renamed Dorothy Soames and raised until adolescenc­e. Intertwine­d with the story of Eileen’s dismal childhood is the history of London’s Foundling Hospital, a grim orphanage dating back to the Victorian era where the children of unwed mothers were warehoused. The memoir is a kind of double tragedy. In addition to the tragedy of Eileen’s childhood, there is the tragedy of the author waiting too long to resolve her relationsh­ip with her mother. (Harpercoll­ins, $27.99)

 ??  ?? Suzanne Van Atten
Suzanne Van Atten
 ??  ?? “The Women’s History of the Modern World” by Rosalind Miles
“The Women’s History of the Modern World” by Rosalind Miles
 ??  ?? “The Secret Life of Dorothy Soames” by Justine Cowan
“The Secret Life of Dorothy Soames” by Justine Cowan
 ??  ?? “Before and After” by Judy Christy and Lisa Wingate
“Before and After” by Judy Christy and Lisa Wingate
 ??  ?? “Of Women and Salt” by Gabriela Garcia
“Of Women and Salt” by Gabriela Garcia

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