The Last Carolina Girl: A Novel

"Unforgettable, this a powerful debut to savor." -- Kim Michele Richardson, New York Times bestselling author of The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek

A searing book club novel for fans of Where the Crawdad's Sing and The Girls in the Stilt House following one girl fighting for her family, her body, and her right to create a future all her own

Some folks will do anything to control the wild spirit of a Carolina girl...

For fourteen-year-old Leah Payne, life in her beloved coastal Carolina town is as simple as it is free. Devoted to her lumberjack father and running through the wilds where the forest meets the shore, Leah's country life is as natural as the Loblolly pines that rise to greet the Southern sky.

When an accident takes her father's life, Leah is wrenched from her small community and cast into a family of strangers with a terrible secret. Separated from her only home, Leah is kept apart from the family and forced to act as a helpmate for the well-to-do household. When a moment of violence and prejudice thrusts Leah into the center of the state's shameful darkness, she must fight for her own future against a world that doesn't always value the wild spirit of a Carolina girl.

Set in 1935 against the very real backdrop of a recently formed state eugenics board, The Last Carolina Girl is a powerful and heart-wrenching story of fierce strength, forgotten history, autonomy, and the places and people we ultimately call home.

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Published Mar 28, 2023

320 pages

Average rating: 6.94

80 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

Margie Pettersen
Oct 27, 2025
8/10 stars
compelling story

Leah is only 14 when her beloved father dies in an accident. She is sent off to live with another family, but is treated as a servant, rather than as a member of the family. She has a feisty spirit and finds herself at odds with Mrs Griffin. I was hoping that this story would have had a different outcome.
Csanders
Sep 16, 2025
10/10 stars
This book is emotional but such a good read. I couldn't put it down.
PatioLinda25
Sep 05, 2025
8/10 stars
Decent, worth the read.
DawnMcDermott
Jul 02, 2024
6/10 stars
This book does indeed tell a sad story based on a true story, a reminder of a history where class mattered, and the start of Eugenics wanted to weed out the "weak". But love wins!
Jeanserrano61
Sep 16, 2023
5/10 stars
I would have stopped half way through as I could tell it was turning sad and depressing.

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