

Newton also carefully presents the problems with the accuracy and ethics of these tools. She begins with a few burning questions: "Had my mom's father really married thirteen times? Had his father really killed a man with a hay hook?” Then she used, 23andMe, and many other resources to track down the truth about her family history, which is rife with scoundrels, slave owners, and a 17th-century accused witch. These ruptures seeded a project that grew like a fairy-tale beanstalk, which the author climbs with unflagging energy. Perhaps her hunger is especially gnawing due to her long-term estrangement from her proudly racist father-and from her holy roller mother for a time, as well. "Ancestor hunger circles the globe” and “spans millennia,” writes blogger, critic, and essayist Newton in her first book. The current wave of interest in genealogy, heredity, family history, and responsibility for past injustices crescendos in a comprehensive work combining personal narrative and reporting.
