Justus Girls, The by Slim Lambright

By • Jun 13th, 2008 • Category: Discussion GuideEmail This Post Email This PostPrint This Post Print This Post

Justus Girls, The by Slim Lambright BUY IT NOW

Introduction

[The] lesson in boys, booze and music would stay with Rachael forever. Of equal importance was the knowledge of having a true friend, someone who had your back, who would stand up to a houseful of guys way across town, in the name of friendship. She vowed that day to return the favor, if Peach ever needed her.

Rachael, called Roach by her friends and later renamed Rasheeda in her Muslim faith, is one of four tight girlfriends growing up in West Philly during the 1950s and 60s. Along with Peaches, Sally Mae (“Mustang Sally”), and Jan, Roach navigates the storms of living in a tough, blue-collar neighborhood. The four girls, daughters of the porters, maids, and factory workers “who took the early bus,” begin to call themselves the Justus Girls in the late 1950s after they form a high-stepping precision drill team that becomes a local sensation. The Justus Girls rapped before there was a Snoop Dog, shook their booty before anyone dreamed of Destiny⬔s Child. But when Slim Lambright’s richly told tale of African-American life and women friends opens, it is thirty years later, and Peaches has just been murdered. The question for the remaining Justus Girls is only partly who killed the wild child, who became a hard-drinking, hard-living waitress at the White Devil Bar and Grill. What the Justus Girls need to resolve even more urgently, as memories return and secrets emerge, is how their friendship failed her. Examining each woman’s life in a series of flashbacks, Slim Lambright turns a tough, unflinching gaze at a wide spectrum of black life. Foster homes and matriarchal families, country ways versus city street smarts, Baptist churches and Muslim temples, loving drag queens and child-molesting old men come alive in a narrative that sways with rhythm and jumps with the beat of the Marvelettes, Temptations, and Tina Turner and the Ikettes. And as the Justus Girls make the passage from childhood to womanhood, their futures are shaped by alcohol, sex, the husbands they choose, and the dreams they pursue. For Peaches, life will end in a gunshot. For the other Justus Girls, that sharp, sudden tragedy is a wake-up call to complete their journey of finding themselves.

Slim Lambright’s original, exciting voice offers up emotional truths, challenging us all to examine our personal and cultural values in a novel with soul — and a huge heart. Questions for Discussion

Rasheeda says, “We can show these young sisters by example how it’s done, what real friends are, instead of just telling them about it. We’re too late for Peach. But we can at least try to be on time for ourselves.” What are “real friends”? What is the importance of women’s friendships compared to family ties and love relationships? In the novel, which relationships are the most positive?

After the funeral, Sally Mae, who is the only Justus Girl born in the South, and Jan, talk about “the ways of Black folk” regarding mourning rituals and Black Baptist funerals. Rasheeda doesn’t know them. Why not? Princess, Peaches’ daughter, also doesn’t know. What are some of those customs? What is the value of knowing your cultural heritage, and what are the ramifications of not knowing?

Another problem for some of the Justus Girls is their lack of a stable family life while growing up. Peaches’ home life is perhaps the most difficult. Does her childhood predict or predetermine her future? What is the home life of the other three girls. How big a factor is it in what happens to each of them?

After Peaches’ terrifying experience with Uncle Elmo, she runs to Vaa, the transvestite, for help. What is Uncle Elmo’s profession? Why do you think Slim Lambright makes Vaa a hero and Uncle Elmo a villain?

Ursula, Peaches’ mother, is a complex character. We first meet her when she “crashes” the funeral. Should she have been invited? Discuss her relationship with her daughter. What are her faults? What are her positive points?

The chapter when Jan is mugged by the child JayRon has an unexpected resolution. What larger messages about compassion and forgiveness does this chapter contain? Do you think it also takes a position on the individual’s responsibility for solving social issues? How much should an individual do? When should the community get involved? When should the state?

Sally Mae also has to learn to forgive. Why? At the end of Chapter 26, her half-sister Bay Girl says, “Thangs got to be set right.” What is she talking about? Is there a cosmic justice to consider in life?

What is the significance of having the last chapter of the book cover the Million Woman March?

Red Top, in the final words of Chapter 28 near the end of the book, says, “This was their life, celebrating small victories, while keeping an eye open for the next crisis….That’s just the way it was for women like her. That’s the way it was for the Justus Girls. For women like us.” Which women is she talking about? Black women? Blue-collar and poor women? All women?

Do you think the title “The Justus Girls” has a deeper meaning? What other plays on words do you find in the title and how do they relate to the novel?

About the Author: Slim Lambright confesses, “I’ve been, among other things, a model, a singer, a waitress, a bartender, a go-go dancer, and a numbers runner, and am now employed freelance, but the less said about that, the better.” The Justus Girls is her first novel. She lives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

No source listed.

Related Posts

  • No Related Post
Tagged as: ,

is a book club and an online author and reader community dedicated to advancing African American literature. Our mission is to expose readers of all ages to a good book in any genre; to support African American authors, books, literary events and bookclubs; to provide marketing resources, tools and tips to authors; and, to promote literacy within the African American community.
Email this author | All posts by

Comments are closed.