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In a Sweet Magnolia Time

A Novel

by Robert Wintner

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When Waties Waring left his wife of 30 years for a "Yankee spitfire" he dropped a turd in the local teacup. Charleston (S.C.) society banished him forever. He, in turn, became the first federal judge in U.S. history to rule that separate but equal is not equal, the hallmark of civil rights in America. Yet his opinion only marked the start of another little war in Charleston, reducing historical impact to an act of revenge. No footnotes survive the judge or his feud with his former society. He is remembered in polite circles there as vindictive and not as a heartfelt liberal. Robert Wintner's tale begins at Judge Waties Waring's funeral, the day Arthur Covingdale, an up-and-coming attorney, must come to terms with his own vengeful role as a stalwart of the Old South. Mr. Covingdale burned a cross at the judge's house and threw a brick through his window back in '52. His contrition at the funeral in '68 marks his first step out from town to the barrier sea islands, as he agrees to drive Jim Cohen home to the marshlands. So begins his journey of redemption. Or maybe he's led by the nose, as Jim Cohen, with a fisherman's patience, dangles his niece, recently single and returned from Guadeloupe, as bait. Jim Cohen and his niece derive from slave stock. The narrator, Covingdale, is a blueblood, landed gentry, hoi paloi. Just as two rivers converge to form Charleston Harbor, so too the bloodlines flow from humble tributaries, from doilies and lace, mudflats and slavery, to their current mix. Within that mix, Arthur Covingdale faces the contradictions in his life and discovers what is of real value. Interview Process: Wintner interviewed Septima Clark. As a Civil Rights activist in the NAACP, Clark focused on education as a tool of change and granted Wintner two interviews in 1977 to that end, setting the story straight on a firsthand account. Most generous with her time, she recalled plantation days with composure, seemingly inured to bitterness, as long as the facts got r

First published
2005

Available formats

  • PrintISBN 9781736622261

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