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70 pages 2 hours read

Delores Phillips

The Darkest Child

Delores PhillipsFiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2004

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Summary and Study Guide

Overview

The Darkest Child (2004) is a coming-of-age historical fiction novel by Delores Phillips. The teenage protagonist and first-person narrator, Tangy Mae Quinn faces racism and segregation in the Jim Crow South, as well as domestic abuse, poverty, and nonconsensual sex work. Despite these challenges, Tangy finds eventual escape when she leaves her abusive mother, Rozelle, and her past behind her to pursue her own goals, which are rooted in education. The novel explores The Role of Education in Achieving Liberation, The Effects of Systemic Racism and Colorism on Individual and Family Dynamics, and The Complexities of Mother-Daughter Relationships Within Troubled Families.

This guide refers to the paperback edition published by Soho Press in 2018.

Content Warning: This guide includes discussions of physical and sexual abuse, child sex trafficking, lynching, infanticide, and segregation. The source material includes racial slurs and ableist and anti-gay language, which is replicated in this guide only in direct quotes.

Plot Summary

In late-1950s small-town Georgia, 13-year-old Tangy Mae Quinn’s mother, Rozelle, who has a mental health condition, says she’s dying as she nears labor. Tangy is one of nine siblings, and the kids are expected to quit school and start working at 12. Tangy, however, excels in school, frustrating her mother. Rozelle prefers her lighter-skinned children, and Tangy is her darkest-skinned child. Tangy’s older brothers, Sam and Harvey, work temporary jobs. Her eldest sister, Mushy, moved to Ohio; Rozelle orders Tangy and her 14-year-old sister, Martha Jean, who is deaf, to write to Mushy about Rozelle’s impending death. At the post office, a man named Velman expresses romantic interest in Martha Jean.

Rozelle’s best friend, Pearl, arrives to deliver the baby, but complications necessitate calling the local midwife, Zadie, whom Rozelle hates. Unbeknownst to the kids, Zadie is Rozelle’s mother. Pearl and her husband, Frank, soon take Rozelle to the hospital, where she gives birth to baby Judy and has a hysterectomy. Tangy’s older sister, Tarabelle, takes over Rozelle’s domestic servant job for the white Munford family. Rozelle is also a sex worker; she forces Tarabelle into sex work, as she did with Mushy. Sam and Harvey are friends with local activists, including Hambone and Tangy’s substitute teacher Junior, who fights for human rights, job opportunities, and the desegregation of public places. They want to get Chadlow, a white man, to stop patrolling the town and arresting Black people with the sheriff’s cooperation.

Rozelle brings Judy home; she avoids her because she’s dark-skinned like Tangy. The kids feed Judy evaporated milk. Mushy comes for a visit and starts seeing a married man, Richard, which Rozelle disapproves of. Mushy calls Rozelle a hypocrite, and Rozelle throws hot coffee in Mushy’s face. Mushy leaves, and Rozelle cries for two days. Tangy’s friend Mattie says that her dad gives money to Rozelle to do “nasty” things. Mattie plans to drop out of school because of limited opportunities for Black women, regardless of education.

Velman buys Martha Jean a coat and delivers a birthday card from Mushy. Rozelle nearly beats Martha Jean to death. Velman resolves to get Martha Jean out of Rozelle’s house. Velman tells Tangy that the postmaster and Chadlow read other people’s mail and discard some of it. Hambone gropes Tangy, and Junior comforts her, encouraging her to focus on her education. Tangy tells Junior about the mail: Junior worries they are discarding his letters to newspapers and the NAACP.

Junior is lynched after confronting the men over the mail. Harvey marries and moves out. Mattie spends more time with Tarabelle, seemingly romantically. Wallace spends time with the midwife, Zadie, who gives him a bike for his birthday.

Rozelle introduces Tangy to her father, Crow. Her father is dark-skinned and calls Tangy a “queen.” He gives her money, but Rozelle takes it after he leaves. Rozelle throws baby Judy off the porch, killing her, and tells Sheriff Betts it was an accident. Rozelle allows Velman to marry Martha Jean in exchange for a car. Wallace takes Tangy to Zadie’s house, revealing that she’s her grandmother. Zadie was raped by a group of men, becoming pregnant with Rozelle. She had difficulty bonding with Rozelle and kicked her out at 13.

Tangy works as a domestic servant for the Whitman family but stays in school. Rozelle takes Tangy to apply for a job with the wealthier Griggs family, but the Griggs boys fight Tangy and Rozelle. Rozelle thinks invisible bugs are crawling on her. Sam beats up one of the Griggs boys and is placed in jail. He’s blamed for Junior’s murder, as Sheriff Betts claims that no white man would hang around Junior. Sheriff Betts, who might be Sam’s father, claims he’s protecting him by holding him in jail.

Tangy now understands that Rozelle forces Tarabelle into sex work. The Quinn children attend the county fair when Black people are allowed in. Hambone gives a political speech. An armed white mob chases the Black crowds away. Mr. Pace encourages Tangy to pursue college. Tarabelle has a second abortion, but there are complications, leaving her sick. Rozelle then forces Tangy into sex work. She is raped attempting to help Sam out of jail. Sam gets out of jail, burns the Griggs’s furniture store and Chadlow’s cafe, then disappears. Martha Jean births a baby girl. White people burn the Black section of town, but not the Quinn house.

The school offers Tangy a stipend to attend the white school, but Rozelle won’t allow it. When Zadie dies, everyone learns that she was Rozelle’s mother. Tarabelle turns 18 and opens Rozelle’s forbidden box, which is full of the kids’ hair; Zadie taught Rozelle this ritual to prevent people from leaving. Tarabelle leaves. Tangy develops romantic feelings for Velman, but he rejects her.

Mushy visits and tells Pearl that Frank is the father of Rozelle’s daughter, Edna. Rozelle leaves Edna with Pearl and Frank. Chadlow badly whips Tangy, but Crow sees and vows to kill Chadlow. Rozelle goes to the farmhouse alone one evening, then returns wearing a bloody sheet. She tells Tangy and Pearl that she was with Chadlow when Junior’s ghost came through the window and killed him. She says that she witnessed Chadlow killing Junior. Sheriff Betts arrives, and Rozelle is taken to a mental health facility. Crow tells Tangy that he killed Chadlow. Crow leaves town but gives Tangy his mother’s contact information. Tangy and Laura move in with Mushy and Richard. When Rozelle is released from the mental health facility, she moves in with Mushy, too.

Tangy is valedictorian. On her graduation day, Tarabelle picks up Rozelle for a picnic, but Laura snoops in her basket and finds lamps, kerosene, and matches. Mushy, Tangy, and Laura head to Penyon Road, where Tarabelle has set the house ablaze. Rozelle trapped Tarabelle inside, killing her. Rozelle lives with Mushy, and Tangy and Laura leave town on a bus, bound for Tangy’s paternal grandmother.

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