Picture of author.

Michele Andrea Bowen

Autor(a) de Church Folk

9+ Works 428 Membros 11 Críticas 3 Favorited

About the Author

Michele Andrea Bowen graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is the niece of an Apostolic Bishop & the granddaughter of an evangelist. She lives with her two daughters in Durham, North Carolina. (Bowker Author Biography)

Includes the name: Michele Andrea Bowen

Séries

Obras por Michele Andrea Bowen

Church Folk (2001) 172 exemplares
Second Sunday (1600) 84 exemplares
Holy Ghost Corner (2006) 80 exemplares
More Church Folk (2010) 43 exemplares
Up at the College (2009) 36 exemplares
Pastor Needs a Boo (2014) 10 exemplares
Riding Dirty and with Jesus? (2012) 1 exemplar
Praying Like Crazy (2020) 1 exemplar
Up at the College (2009) 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Gumbo: A Celebration of African American Writing (2002) — Contribuidor — 125 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

I couldn't get past the first few pages. Maybe if I had read the first book I would feel differently, but I picked this up as a "library discard". I think the library was right.
 
Assinalado
jrbeach | 1 outra crítica | Sep 25, 2015 |
This book is charming. It takes place in the South, and is about a preacher, his wife, and their community. The language is rich, the characters easy to relate to.
 
Assinalado
sapphireblueeye | 4 outras críticas | Jul 7, 2012 |
While on a random shopping trip this book caught my eye and I decided to give it a try since it is not my "norm." My initial thought was that this book would be a quick read since I'm kind of familiar with the subject manner. To say that this book was tedious to work through is an understatement.

In Holy Ghost Corner, we meet a lot of flamboyant church folk. The story is centered around Teresa Hopson the owner of, Miss Thang's Holy Ghost Corner and Church Woman's Boutique, and her love interest Lamont Green a real estate developer. Teresa Hopson has a painful breakup with the skirt chasing Rev. Parvell Sykes leaving her lonely and doubting God about sending her a husband. Lamont Green is so ambitious and business minded that he does not have time for a serious relationship. In the background there is a shady business deal that is developing that involves all the good church folk. Lamont wants to rebuild old black neighborhood of Cashmere Estates but there is stiff opposition that has infiltrated the church. There are also our supporting characters that like the reformed prostitute, Baby Doll, and her man, Mr. Lacy, who is blind. Queen Esther who works for Teresa and happens to be Lamont's aunt is your typical scripture quoting,anointing oil rubbing,church lady. The characters and entire story was so cliche that it was just got to a point where I wanted to throw this book out of a window. The overused church folk stereotypes were exhausting.

I did like the fact that Bowen included so many positive, driven African-American women in her story. Bowen developed successful African-American women entrepreneurs, real estate brokers, and architects as characters. We need to see more of these characters in urban/Christian fiction. The church scene that Bowen included where souls were saved was quite moving. She really conveyed the redemptive work of Christ in a way that it came right off the page and touched your heart. Ultimately, Holy Ghost Corner related how we must trust God in every part of our life.
… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
pinkcrayon99 | 2 outras críticas | May 9, 2011 |
This review was initially published on my blog: http://jewelknits.blogspot.com/2010/08/more-church-folk-by-michele-andrea.html

This book is the follow up to Ms. Bowen's "Church Folk" (which I have not read).

I kept going back and forth from this book .. not because it didn't have an interesting story (it IS interesting and imaginative), but because I had a struggle with reading the vernacular that much of the dialogue is written in. We're talking about highly-educated people in many cases, and I, for one, don't know any educated black folk that talk like this, but that could be just me. I also struggled a bit with the fact that even the "good" preachers were noticing things like double D's sitting in the next pew over.

For me, especially near the beginning of the book, I felt that the personalities and events worked to hard to prop up the stereotype of black church-going folk ... Yes, sometimes people DO fall out ... and there are those bossy biddies who think they run everything, including the preacher, but I'm talking about the corruption inside the highest circles of the church - I just felt that someone who had never experienced the soulful experience of attending a "Holy Spirit" church would be totally put off by it and that reading this would only reinforce any bias they might have against it.

Whew! Having said THAT, I did eventually get over it as the story delved deeper into the inner workings of the church and focused more on it's "good" preachers.

The premise of THIS double-cross is truly original, and the fact that one of our "good" preachers also doubles as an FBI agent only adds to the fun. I love the interactions between the preachers and their wives - they are written well and true-to-life.

There is a huge assortment of characters, but Ms. Bowen introduces them into the story in such a fashion that there's no getting mixed up as to who is who. The paradox of how to get rid of the bad influence in the church while striving to do it in a Christian manner (and sometimes failing) is also at times totally hilarious.

I think that if you read this story with an eye towards the fact that it is simply supposed to be an enjoyable read and not a treatise on black churches in America :), you WILL enjoy it. I know I did.

QUOTES:

It was a magnificent casket. George Wilson had seen many a caske tin his day, but he'd never seen one like this.
First, the casket was painted a sparkling lime-green. Even the metal casket rack was lime-green. Then it was trimmed in gold. But as if that weren't enough, the casket had pictures of Old Daddy painted on both sides. instead of flowers on the top, they had anchored one of Old Daddy's black silk top hats, with a lime-green brocade band around the crown.

It troubled his soul that two of his bishops had died under some very awful circumstances, and were involved with activities that put their eternal souls in jeopardy. Folks needed to quit playing around and toying with Hell like that. It was as if theses people thought that they would die and then discover that somebody had conveniently slipped "Get Out of Hell Free" cards in their caskets.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
jewelknits | 1 outra crítica | Aug 23, 2010 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
9
Also by
1
Membros
428
Popularidade
#57,056
Avaliação
4.0
Críticas
11
ISBN
46
Marcado como favorito
3

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