Play Book Tag discussion
December 2020: Other Books
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Passing by Nella Larsen - 4 stars
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I just bought a copy of Quicksand. Thanks for the tip!

I agree, it reads as very modern, especially considering it was published in 1929! Of course, it also means racism hasn't exactly changed a lot, unfortunately. I am glad the laws, at least, have changed since that era.


I have not read The Vanishing Half but I noticed on the blurb sounds similar to this one.

Books mentioned in this topic
Black No More (other topics)Passing (other topics)
Childhood friends Irene Redfield and Clare Kendry reconnect after many years. Irene has remained in the black community of her youth, while Clare has married a bigoted white man who does not know his wife is of mixed race. Clare misses a feeling of community and befriends Irene’s family, spending time at their house and attending local functions. Irene is not completely comfortable with her old friend and is troubled by her decision to “pass.” This troubled feeling is at the heart of the book.
The story is narrated in third person from Irene’s perspective. It examines loyalty, longing, respect, risk-taking, and identity. I read it as both an indictment of racism and a portrayal of the heavy personal cost of social mores that require racial categorization. It was published in 1929, during a time when “separate but equal” was the law of the land in the US. I was unprepared for the ending and it offers the reader many possible interpretations. I can see why this book is considered a classic.