Offers readers the delectable pleasure of watching an outwardly perfect family crumble under its own arrogance and rot ... May remind readers of Zora Neale Hurston’s work. At her best, Citchens can effortlessly convey history, personality and desire ... Diamond is clearly the character to root for. The other major characters aren’t as absorbing ... Many crucial dialogue exchanges are skipped. Over and over, conversations that might elucidate the characters’ attitudes and reveal the changing dynamics of their relationships are missing ... This novel owes its appeal to Citchens’s intimate knowledge of the setting and its residents; I only wish she took more opportunities to have them intimately engage one another.
Told primarily through the perspectives of Priscilla and Diamond. Giving these two voices the main stage allows Citchens to reveal not only the subjugation of women under patriarchy but also the seductive power of masculinity when it is bound up in holiness.