"This compelling narrative of the inner mind's spiritual reckoning with God on the mission fields and mountainsides of Haiti is beautifully and masterfully revealed through a naked candor and self reflection seldom seen in writing. There are no Oompa Loompas or Everlasting Gobstoppers, but, no doubt, Yolantha Harrison Pace could give even the wily Willy Wonka a run for his money as the reluctant hero and pied piper of hope in the chocolate factory of Haiti. If you have ever wondered what it is like to be born of the black American experience and then to go on the mission field, then...
"This compelling narrative of the inner mind's spiritual reckoning with God on the mission fields and mountainsides of Haiti is beautifully and...
This book is a potluck dinner of essays, ghetto-tales and poetic insights into the exquisite richness of being Black in White America. Within the multitude of fallacies spawned by political correctness, liberals and conservatives alike often ask, "What's black got to do with it? When are you people gonna get over yourselves?" In today's enlightened era where the use of the word Mammy is considered an embarrassment, where 'shoutin' in church' is not done by "Educated Negroes," and where the subtle power of hairnet wearing school lunch ladies is ignored... Yolantha Harrison-Pace has extracted...
This book is a potluck dinner of essays, ghetto-tales and poetic insights into the exquisite richness of being Black in White America. Within the mult...