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Far from Home - Memories of World War II and Afterward (Paperback)
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Far from Home - Memories of World War II and Afterward (Paperback)
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"She's got no more business there than a pig has with a Bible."
That's what her father said when Mary Herring announced that she
would be moving to Washington, DC, in late1942. Recently graduated
from the North Carolina School for Black Deaf and Blind Students,
Mary had been invited to the nation's capital by a cousin to see a
specialist about her hearing loss. Though nothing could be done
about her deafness, Mary quickly proved her father wrong by passing
the civil service examination with high marks. "Far from Home:
Memories of World War II and Afterward," the second installment of
her autobiography, describes her life from her move to Washington
to the present.
Mary soon became a valued employee for the Navy, maintaining
rosters for the many servicemen in war theaters worldwide. Her
remarkable gift for detail depicts Washington in meticulous layers,
a sleepy Southern town force-grown into a dynamic geopolitical hub.
Life as a young woman amid the capital's Black middle class could
be warm and fun, filled with visits from family and friends, and
trips home to Iron Mine for tearful, joyous reunions. But the
reality of the times was never far off. On many an idyllic
afternoon, she and her friends found somber peace in Arlington
Cemetery, next to the grave of the sole Unknown Soldier at that
time. During an evening spent at the U.S.O., one hearing woman
asked how people like her could dance, and Mary answered, "With our
feet." She became a pen pal to several young servicemen, but did
not want to know why some of them suddenly stopped writing.
Despite the close friends and good job that she had in Washington,
the emotional toll caused Mary to return to her family home in
IronMine, NC. There, she rejoined her family and resumed her
country life. She married and raised four daughters, and recounts
the joys and sorrows she experienced through the years,
particularly the loss of her parents. Her blend of the gradual
transformation of Southern rural life with momentous events such as
Hurricane Hazel creates an extraordinary narrative history. The
constant in "Far from Home" remains the steady confidence that Mary
Herring Wright has in herself, making her new memoir a perfect
companion to her first.
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