Find Anita at Sisters Movie House - Saturday, September 14th
Reading 11:00am - 12:00pm, Signing 12:00pm-12:30pm
About The Peach Seed
As readers will discover in The Peach Seed, the catchphrase at the top of this page has ushered boys into manhood for generations in the family of fictional widower Fletcher Dukes, a seventy-year-old black man living in southwest Georgia. In each rite-of-passage, those words accompany a monkey, intricately carved from a peach seed. Through many lines—from Africa’s lost trails, to antebellum to modern-day—much changes. And too much remains the same.
Fletcher is distracted from a family feud when blues singer Altovise Benson—the plucky lost love of his life—unexpectedly retires home after fifty-two years. As teens, they worked in the (factual) Albany Civil Rights Movement until separated by horrific events. He remained local; she migrated north.
The story is set in Albany, Georgia and surrounds; Dougherty County, a region baptized in natural beauty, a place not unlike much of America—with a history that runs the gamut, and many untold stories.
A bounty of voices convey intricacies of place and people, and at it’s core, this southern American tale shows two people battling the consequences of history’s sweep and personal choice. Much is laid bare when lives interconnect across miles and eras through the Dukes family talisman ~ a monkey delicately carved from a peach seed.
Anita Gail Jones, born and raised in Albany, Georgia, maintains a strong connection with this southwest corner of the state. This region is the setting for her debut novel, The Peach Seed, (Published August 1, 2023 | Henry Holt & Co) and represented by Steve Ross Agency. The manuscript was selected as a 2021 Finalist in the PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction and was acquired by Retha Powers at Holt in a two-book deal.
In 2002, Anita and her husband, Rob Roehrick, founded the Gaines-Jones Education Foundation, awarding need-based college scholarships to Black students in southwest Georgia and the San Francisco Bay Area in memory of her mother, sister, and father.
Her oral tradition storytelling grew out of an early desire to write and illustrate children’s stories. She worked many years in San Francisco Bay Area schools as an artist-in-residence, combining storytelling, visual arts and writing in K-12 workshops. She also provided customized presentations for corporations, organizations, school assemblies, senior living, libraries and private clients. Anita has a collection of original stories—well-tested on audiences over many years.