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by Fannie Cook (Author)
Winner of the George Washington Carver Award, Mrs. Palmer's Honey (1946) tells the story of Honey Hoop, a Black maid focused mainly on supporting her family and making ends meet. When, during the war effort, she takes a job at a munitions factory, she gets exposed to the organized labor efforts of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, which her brother has joined, and becomes a social activist herself. While some critics called its programatic aspects "propaganda" in the time of this publication, today the novel stands as a document of the ways in which different sectors of American society came together to fight for justice, inclusion, and respect for Black Americans.
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