The Wiley Chronicles – Book One: The Early Years A Delta Family. A Legacy Worth Preserving. A Story America Needs to Hear. Nineteen children. One Mississippi Delta farmhouse. A legacy stitched from sweat, survival, faith, and fierce love. The Wiley Chronicles – Book One: The Early Years opens the door to a world rarely captured with such intimacy. A firsthand look at a Black sharecropping family navigating the 1930s and 1960s Mississippi Delta. Through vivid storytelling, humor, heartbreak, and hope, three sisters— Sylvia Wills, Clem Wiley-Rogers, and Dr. Thelma Wiley Lucas —reconstruct the world that shaped them. Told through first-person voices and oral history, this book preserves the lived experiences of a Black sharecropping family raising nineteen children amid hardship, faith, and unbreakable love. From cotton fields at first light to porch-side wisdom, schoolhouse adventures, potbelly stove memories, and the joys and trials of growing up in a family of nineteen, this book preserves history the way it truly lived: loud, loving, and unforgettable. Alongside personal memories are Delta Echoes —rich historical interludes that place the Wiley family’s story inside the larger tapestry of the Jim Crow South, the Great Migration, and the cultural resilience of the Black American experience. Inside these pages, you’ll discover: The rhythms of sharecropping life and the unspoken rules of the Delta - Childhood stories full of mischief, laughter, and lessons learned the hard way - The power of a mother’s steady hands and a father’s unyielding work ethic - How a family of twenty-one moved like a machine—tight, determined, and full of heart - A living record of Black Southern history told by those who lived it Both deeply personal and historically grounded, The Wiley Chronicles honors the elders who endured, the children who remembered, and the descendants who continue the legacy. As the Great Migration looms, the Wiley family stands at the crossroads of history, holding fast to legacy while preparing for what comes next. Why Readers Love This Book: This powerful, raw, and heartfelt memoir written by the children of Tealy and Clemonteen Wiley reads like sitting on the porch with family; listening, laughing, learning, and feeling every bit of the Delta sun. It is oral history captured on the page, preserving stories before they are lost and celebrating the strength of a people who refused to break. More than a memoir, The Wiley Chronicles is a cultural record—honoring Black resilience, memory, and the voices too often left out of American history. Perfect for readers of multigenerational memoirs, African American history, Southern storytelling, and anyone who believes our stories deserve to be remembered.