Mudbound by Hillary Jordan

Mudbound

by Hillary Jordan

'This is storytelling at the height of its powers: the ache of wrongs not yet made right, the fierce attendance of history made as real as rain, as true as this minute. Hillary Jordan writes with the force of a Delta storm' - Barbara Kingsolver.

Reviewed by readingwithwrin on

4 of 5 stars

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“What we can't speak, we say in silence.”

Mudbound is mostly told from the perspective of Laura, but we also see perspectives from Herny, Jamie, Florence, Hap, Ronsel, and Pappy.

With multiple different perspectives happening we really get to see what life was like in Mississippi after WWII. We see soldiers coming home, and a family that's used to city life adjusting to farm life. A father-in-law who is a despicable human being in my opinion. We also get to see share tenants and the struggles that they faced and how they always lived in fear of losing what they had made if the owner didn't like what they were doing or just wanted to make more money off of them.


Laura is one of those people I wanted to like and I did at first, but as time went on I started disliking her for little things she was doing when she would do something else and the process would just keep happening until the end of the book and then I just felt kind of meh about her.

My favorite characters in this book were Hap and Florence they had made a good life together and each had their own jobs and worked together as a team for there family. They knew what they wanted out of life and even though they still had lots of worries and uncertainty because of where they lived and the color of there skin they didn't let that stop them. Honestly, I want a whole book about this family and what they did next and how they dealt with the anger, etc that they had after what happened to there son.


As for the other characters, I was just meh about them too, they were realistic and true to the thinking of the time sadly. Which is what made me struggle with this book because I hate that there is still so much racism in this country and that a lot of people still think like Pap and Henry did about things. Jamie wanted to be good, but he had his own demons to fight and because of those demons he had to make awful choices that will affect someone else life forever.


Mudbound is one of those books that I kind of hated at times because of how realistic it felt. Because of that though I did give it a high-ish rating because it made me feel so many different emotions and it felt like I was actually there throughout the book and that this was possibly real life.



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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 4 November, 2017: Finished reading
  • 4 November, 2017: Reviewed