This month I will be reviewing We are Not Like Them by Christine Pride and Jo Piazza.
It's a story about best friends, Riley and Jenny. Riley and Jenny have been best friends since they were five years old. Now, thirty years later, we're seeing how things have evolved between them.
Jenny always wanted to be married and have kids. She is married, to Kevin, and is expecting her first child. Getting pregnant had been difficult and she had gone through IVF unsuccessfully many times. With their life savings depleted and their credit cards maxed out, it is Riley who gives them the money to try again, and this time it took.
Riley, on the other hand, wanted to be a journalist and went away to college for her education, followed by working ten years in another state before finally coming home to be an on-air reporter at their local news station.
Jenny is white and Riley is black. Riley is also one of only two black people at the news station - the other one being a behind the scenes person. So when news breaks that an unarmed black teenager has been shot by a white policeman, Riley is given the story to cover. It's a career building story and one that is close to her heart because she is black. She knows it will be a hard story to tell and tell it impartially.
It's made harder when she learns that the policeman that shot the teenager is Jenny's husband, Kevin.
Each woman is going through their own personal struggle as it relates to how this one event, and the resulting events, impacts their respective lives. Will the teenager survive? Will Jenny and Riley's relationship survive? Can they see and understand each other's perspectives? The question is, how will it all play out?
Sadly, black and brown people being shot - and killed - by white police officers is not an unfamiliar one or one where we have to stretch the imagination over much but this story is told in a way that evokes emotion. I read the question and answer session at the end of the book and the authors' goal was to make you feel empathy for both Riley and Jenny and they did that successfully. It's told in alternating points of view of Riley and Jenny, who dig deep into their differences as well as their, hopefully, unbreakable love for one another. It's a good book and well told.
I was immediately drawn in by the first two lines of the prologue, which are compelling, chilling and heartbreaking all at once:
When the bullets hit him, first his arm, then his stomach, it doesn't feel like he'd always imagined it would. Because of course, as a Black boy growing in this neighborhood, he'd imagined it.
If you had asked me six years ago the status of racism in America I would've told you that it wasn't quite dead but it was in hospice care because I honestly thought there were few racists left in America. But four years of an administration that emboldened the worst impulses of select groups and the resulting headlines of unarmed black and brown people being shot and killed by white police officers has opened my eyes. As a white woman, I will never fully understand the challenges my black and brown friends face on a daily basis but this story touches on it in such a way that I hope it helps educate me - and others - if even just a little bit.
For more book reviews go to https://barriesummy.blogspot.com/index.html
Wednesday, February 02, 2022
Book Review Club - January 2022
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7 comments:
Wow what a story! I wonder why the reporter wouldn't have admitted to a conflict of interest? I appreciate your noting that a white person could not know what it would feel like to be a PoC, but if this book helps to educate and to raise empathy, it is well needed.
The reporter didn't mention her conflict of interest because she saw this as a real career building story and she wanted to prove she could be impartial in telling the story, even though she had a connection to it.
Sounds like a good book for me to read. I have lived and worked in multi-racial communities, but don't really know what it's like to live in someone else's situation. Right now I'm trying to come to grips with what is happening in the States and Canada. Like you, I didn't realize how much has been hidden from sight until recent political and health issues brought the feelings and attitudes to the forefront. - Margy
Yes, the last six years have been disheartening. So much for the post-racist era we thought Obama's election had ushered in.
Great review, Lucy. Sounds like a good and important book. I read The Hate U Give several years ago and found it quite good and very moving.
I was disabused of the notion that we lived in a post-racial society after Obama was inaugurated and all the hate that dredged up in certain circles. So very disheartening.
Ditto what everyone above me has said. I'm also interested in the author's treatment of friendship. These days, via social media, we reconnect with people we were close to years ago. Sometimes with great results, sometimes not. Thanks for this great review!
This would be a good read for me, I think.
I have no close friends, and I would love someone like this in my life.
Racism is on the rise, with incidents getting more serious. I taught many years in racially diverse schools, and grew up in multicultural Toronto, it was not like this current state of affairs.
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