READING: FORTWORTH MAGAZINE – WILDCATTERS TELLING STORIES

Among several real historical figures depicted in Mourner’s Bench are Daisy Bates, a civil rights activist who led the “Little Rock Nine” in the integration of Little Rock Central High School; John Walker, a civil rights lawyer; and Carrie Dilworth, who was an officer for the racial egalitarian Southern Tenant Farmers’ Union in the 1930s.

INTERVIEW: UNIVERSITY OF DALLAS – THE MERCURY

Critics and readers have praised “Mourner’s Bench,” citing its realistic portrayal of the events and people of the time. Michael Cart of Booklist hailed the novel for “successfully dramatizing an essential era in American history.” Dennis Lehane, author of “Shutter Island,” lauded the novel as “a stunning debut.”

REVIEW: FOREWORD REVIEWS

An inspiring mother-daughter tale set in the Civil Rights era Deep South, with religious overtones and headstrong characters.

What are people saying about Mourner’s Bench?…

What are people saying about Mourner’s Bench?…

“Please check out Sanderia Faye’s new novel, Mourner’s Bench.It inspired, shook and awed me. So much funk in here!” — Kiese Laymon author of Long Division “One of the best reads for 2015!!!” — Richard Johnson, former...

INTERVIEW: ROLLING OUT

Sanderia Faye’s Mourner’s Bench has received praise ranging from “With Mourner’s Bench, Sanderia Faye announces herself as a bold, at times intoxicating, original voice in American fiction. This is a stunning debut” (by Dennis Lehane, author of Mystic River, Gone Baby Gone and Shutter Island) to “[A]n absorbing meditation on the meaning of religion in a small town as well as a keen-eyed perspective on the way one African-American community encountered the civil rights movement. An astute coming-of-age tale set against an all-too-relevant background” (by Kirkus Review). Mourner’s Bench explores religion, civil rights, voting rights, feminism and family dynamics.