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Knowing you…

by A. Ade’

I story about knowing who you are

Topics
#identity
#self

What's Included

Interactive chapters with dual narration
High-quality text-to-speech
Harmoniq ultrasonic notes (Premium)
Bonus content & interactive elements

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Strange Fruit, by Antone Ade, In the haunting echoes of a Southern town’s darkest hour, *Strange Fruit* tells the story of a family forever scarred by a brutal act of racial terror. When the Ku Klux Klan—shielded by a complicit sheriff—lynched their grandfather, the women he left behind were forced to navigate a world that offered them no justice, no safety, and no peace. Fifty-seven years later, the trauma still lingers. Passed down like an heirloom, it shapes the lives of his descendants—especially the women—who carry the weight of memory, fear, and unresolved grief. As the past resurfaces, so too does the question: how do you heal when the wound was never allowed to close? Antone Ade’s *Strange Fruit* is a searing work of historical fiction that explores the generational toll of racial violence, the silence that follows injustice, and the unbreakable strength of Black women who refuse to forget. This is not just a story of pain—it’s a story of legacy, resistance, and the quiet power of remembrance.

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The Wall

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Throughout history, both physical and mental barriers have obstructed societal progress by excluding marginalized groups from full participation in public life. Physical obstacles—such as inaccessible infrastructure, segregation laws, and gendered spaces—have limited access to education, healthcare, and economic opportunity. Meanwhile, mental barriers like stigma, prejudice, and systemic bias have reinforced discrimination against people with disabilities, racial minorities, and those with mental health conditions. These intertwined obstacles have delayed social equity and innovation, but advocacy movements have gradually dismantled them, paving the way for more inclusive policies and cultural shifts.

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