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$6.63The Story
A bestselling memoir of a vibrant childhood spent in a thriving St. Louis African American community before âurban renewalâ changed everything.
Vivian Gibson grew up in Mill Creek Valley, a segregated working-class neighborhood in St. Louis that was razed in 1959 to build a highway, an act of racism disguised under urban renewal as âprogress.â A moving memoir of family life at a time very different from the present, The Last Children of Mill Creek chronicles the everyday lived experiences of Gibsonâs large familyâher seven siblings, her crafty, college-educated mother, and her hard-working fatherâand the friends, shop owners, church ladies, teachers, and others who made Mill Creek into a warm, tight-knit African American community. In Gibsonâs words, âThis memoir is about survival, as told from the viewpoint of a watchful young girlâa collection of decidedly universal stories that chronicle the extraordinary lives of ordinary people.â
Winner of a Missouri Humanities award for literary achievement, The Last Children of Mill Creek is an important book for anyone interested in urban development, race, and community historyâor for anyone who was once a child.
Praise for The Last Children of Mill Creek
2022 Missouri Author of the Year Winner
Missouri's âGreat Reads from Great Placesâ Selection for the 2023 National Book Festival
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âThis is a story borne aloft by the sheer human joy of storytelling, of memory, of tender love for a mother and a father and for a vanished time and place. It is a book that, while steadfastly refusing the American fiction of color blindness, just as steadfastly refuses to portray Black life through the single warped lens of white-induced pain.â âTheLos Angeles Review of BooksDescription
A bestselling memoir of a vibrant childhood spent in a thriving St. Louis African American community before âurban renewalâ changed everything.
Vivian Gibson grew up in Mill Creek Valley, a segregated working-class neighborhood in St. Louis that was razed in 1959 to build a highway, an act of racism disguised under urban renewal as âprogress.â A moving memoir of family life at a time very different from the present, The Last Children of Mill Creek chronicles the everyday lived experiences of Gibsonâs large familyâher seven siblings, her crafty, college-educated mother, and her hard-working fatherâand the friends, shop owners, church ladies, teachers, and others who made Mill Creek into a warm, tight-knit African American community. In Gibsonâs words, âThis memoir is about survival, as told from the viewpoint of a watchful young girlâa collection of decidedly universal stories that chronicle the extraordinary lives of ordinary people.â
Winner of a Missouri Humanities award for literary achievement, The Last Children of Mill Creek is an important book for anyone interested in urban development, race, and community historyâor for anyone who was once a child.
Praise for The Last Children of Mill Creek
2022 Missouri Author of the Year Winner
Missouri's âGreat Reads from Great Placesâ Selection for the 2023 National Book Festival
Â
âThis is a story borne aloft by the sheer human joy of storytelling, of memory, of tender love for a mother and a father and for a vanished time and place. It is a book that, while steadfastly refusing the American fiction of color blindness, just as steadfastly refuses to portray Black life through the single warped lens of white-induced pain.â âTheLos Angeles Review of Books











