61 pages • 2 hours read
Kim Michele RichardsonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
As the title implies, The Book Woman’s Daughter puts books at the center of the narrative, serving several different functions. Books offer freedom, a source of income, consolation, connection, and education. Honey says books are “[a]n escape, a friend, a lesson, and liberty for us all” (194). The last line of the novel highlights the most important function of books to Honey: “books had not only saved me, her, and others, but had given us something even bigger and more precious: Freedom” (310). In this passage, “her” refers to the “Book Woman,” Honey’s Mama. Both women experience freedom due to their love of books—literally, in Honey’s case, because books play a key role in Honey’s emancipation hearing. The hearing only happens because Honey reads about a famous emancipation case in an old newspaper while at work. Additionally, the judge was a patron of the Book Woman (Honey’s Mama) and believes being a Pack Horse librarian is a respectable profession. In other words, reading saves Honey from the House of Reform. For Honey, books are key to her survival as a free woman. She thinks, “A job and money—and the books—meant I could at least survive” (130).
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