01639cam a2200301 4500 264304228 TxAuBib 20151222120000.0 001003s2001||||||||||||||||||||||||eng|u 00050340 9780525945833 23.95 0525945830 23.95 (OCoLC)45172802 TxAuBib Martin, Lee. Quakertown / Lee Martin. Dutton, 2001. 289 p. ; 21 cm. In Quakertown, Lee Martin travels back in time to 1920s Texas to tell the story of a flourishing black community that was segregated from its white brethren—and of the remarkable gardener who was asked to do the unimaginable. Based on the true story of a shameful episode in north Texas history, Quakertown draws on the rich texture of the South—the Pecan Creek running along the edges of Quakertown, the remarkable and rare white lilac, and the rising tensions marking each nod and greeting. With strength and a deep wisdom of heart, Martin carves out the delicate story of two families—one white and one black—and the child whose birth brought a gift of forgiveness. Suffused with Martin’s deep compassion and profound humanity, Quakertown is an unforgettable novel from a master of American prose. 20010920. Neighborhoods Fiction. Gardeners Fiction. African Americans Housing Fiction. Segregation Fiction. Denton (Tex) Fiction. Historical fiction. TXHAM