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The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek

By Julie Padgett

Yes, this is a book about a librarian from long ago. However, this is not your normal librarian, setting, or mere history lesson. Author Kim Michele Richardson pulls on the unique time period when Kentucky utilized pack-horse librarians to navigate the rough terrain, trails, and natural elements to deliver books to those living in desolate and hard-to-reach places. She highlights the intense poverty and hunger of the region, difficulties of funding for materials, and how necessity can lead to creative solutions when it seems everything is stacked against you.

Richardsons characters are desperately trying to find a way to feed their families, themselves, and their souls. It is rewarding to see how books (and literacy) can help lift even the most depressed and alienated. All of that would be enough of a story to tell, but the books title character also happens to belong to one of the Kentucky blue people a small population that had blue skin due to a genetic blood condition. They confronted racism, alienation, and violence for their different appearance.

Cussy, the pack-mule librarian, must learn to fight the intense prejudices of some in her community and her own desire to be like everyone else. She learns tough lessons about pride and humanity making her a brave, independent woman in the end. She also sees firsthand how she can make a difference, build friendships, and lift those around her.

The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek takes on tough topics, some of which we are still facing. Keep tissues on hand and enjoy the route that Cussy and her mule, Junia, traverse; the people that they encounter; and the reminder about the power of the written word. The deep messages of how we need connection, compassion, and understanding are universal and make it worth the read.

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