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scotchsaurus's review against another edition
3.0
A savagely scathing satire, but it felt like it ran dry in the last third. Also, the end's mob murder felt unnecessary, and maybe took a little too much pleasure in the violence.
booksbythecup's review against another edition
4.0
Thank you to Penguin Classics for gifting this book to feature and review.
"What, indeed, was fifty, sixty or seventy dollars when one was leaving behind insult, ostracism, segregation and discrimination?"
There is much to discuss in the pages of this satire and I'm not sure if I'm ready. But I want to. Let's give it a try.
Imagine living in 1930s America, in New York City as a black man or woman. Imagine undergoing a procedure that allows you to bleach your skin and become a white man? What if the institution of race was completely turned on its axis and black people could turn white? In the 1930s, being a fair skinned black person who could (and can) cross the color line, or mulatto, are considered the 'desirables' of the black race, accepted by others because they are closer to the pure white pigmentation.
Would you do it? Would you feel like Max and later millions of other black people and "save" yourself from the hardships that society has attached and contributed to the "race" problem?
Would you save your $50 to cash in on the solution Dr Crookman has come up with at "Black No More" sanitarium? At Black No More, a person can walk into mysterious chamber, "with a formidable apparatus of sparkling nickel," that resembles "a cross between a dentist's chair and electric chair," to undergo a procedure that will change the color of the skin you were born with?
Max Disher does just that, leaving his pigmentation behind in the sanitarium chair at Black No More. I thought it was interesting that shortly after Max's skin bleaching procedure, he misses the fellowship he found among his people, black people. But soon discovers he is looked at with suspicion and distrust--because he's white.
“There was nothing left for him except the hard materialistic, grasping, inbred society of the whites. Sometimes a slight feeling of regret that he had left his people forever would cross his mind, but it fled before the painful memories of past experiences in this, his home town.”
Max rebrands/renames himself Matt Fisher and must now come up with a way to make a living. He can invent himself further as an anthropologist, one who gets into the business of white supremacy. The very thing Max was once a victim of, becomes the thing he use to make his fortune.
Matt is on his way to gaining the material and social advantages that at one time, were elusive because of the color of his skin. He even gets the pretty but not so intelligent white girl who earlier rebuffed him when he was black.
This satirical novel, although short, packs a punch and gives much food for thought. The book lays bare some aspects of black life that become unnecessary as droves of people take their money out of the bank, the real estate market in black communities, even the hair straightening shops.
One girl says, "but I guess I can hold out with this here bad hair until Saturday night. You know I've taken too much punishment being dark these twenty-two years to miss this opportunity."
Schuyler takes everything we think we believe about race relations, the movements (social and economic) and sort of turns it all upside down.
What I thought by the end, was how this book lays bare a very simple and plain truth. We are all the same race, the human race. We are all related and no one is better or greater than the next person. But we live in a society that's used race and other prejudicial attitudes as a divisive tool.
"What, indeed, was fifty, sixty or seventy dollars when one was leaving behind insult, ostracism, segregation and discrimination?"
There is much to discuss in the pages of this satire and I'm not sure if I'm ready. But I want to. Let's give it a try.
Imagine living in 1930s America, in New York City as a black man or woman. Imagine undergoing a procedure that allows you to bleach your skin and become a white man? What if the institution of race was completely turned on its axis and black people could turn white? In the 1930s, being a fair skinned black person who could (and can) cross the color line, or mulatto, are considered the 'desirables' of the black race, accepted by others because they are closer to the pure white pigmentation.
Would you do it? Would you feel like Max and later millions of other black people and "save" yourself from the hardships that society has attached and contributed to the "race" problem?
Would you save your $50 to cash in on the solution Dr Crookman has come up with at "Black No More" sanitarium? At Black No More, a person can walk into mysterious chamber, "with a formidable apparatus of sparkling nickel," that resembles "a cross between a dentist's chair and electric chair," to undergo a procedure that will change the color of the skin you were born with?
Max Disher does just that, leaving his pigmentation behind in the sanitarium chair at Black No More. I thought it was interesting that shortly after Max's skin bleaching procedure, he misses the fellowship he found among his people, black people. But soon discovers he is looked at with suspicion and distrust--because he's white.
“There was nothing left for him except the hard materialistic, grasping, inbred society of the whites. Sometimes a slight feeling of regret that he had left his people forever would cross his mind, but it fled before the painful memories of past experiences in this, his home town.”
Max rebrands/renames himself Matt Fisher and must now come up with a way to make a living. He can invent himself further as an anthropologist, one who gets into the business of white supremacy. The very thing Max was once a victim of, becomes the thing he use to make his fortune.
Matt is on his way to gaining the material and social advantages that at one time, were elusive because of the color of his skin. He even gets the pretty but not so intelligent white girl who earlier rebuffed him when he was black.
This satirical novel, although short, packs a punch and gives much food for thought. The book lays bare some aspects of black life that become unnecessary as droves of people take their money out of the bank, the real estate market in black communities, even the hair straightening shops.
One girl says, "but I guess I can hold out with this here bad hair until Saturday night. You know I've taken too much punishment being dark these twenty-two years to miss this opportunity."
Schuyler takes everything we think we believe about race relations, the movements (social and economic) and sort of turns it all upside down.
What I thought by the end, was how this book lays bare a very simple and plain truth. We are all the same race, the human race. We are all related and no one is better or greater than the next person. But we live in a society that's used race and other prejudicial attitudes as a divisive tool.
sarah_sycamore's review against another edition
informative
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? N/A
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? N/A
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
Necessary reading for those seeking to understand the social, political, and capital functions of race in The USA. A thought experiment that feels as relevant as ever.
alysynhardt's review against another edition
4.0
This book does a really great job of exercising my satire/irony skills. A lot of carefully chosen language here. I love the progression & the ending is one of those scenes I wish more people would read just to feel something and wake up. Racism isn't dead and this book is still relevant.
deepsearch's review against another edition
3.0
A broad satire that was likely quite provocative when it was published in 1931. (Warning: Though written by a Black author, this has all the offensive language you would expect in a word of its time period.)
For today's reader, the most effective sections focus on political and religious hypocrisy, rather than race relations.
For today's reader, the most effective sections focus on political and religious hypocrisy, rather than race relations.
alexak_28's review against another edition
4.0
OMG this books was so much better than I expected it to be!! Problems it addressed and mentioned are still relevant today especially its comments on the fake "Pro-black" black people in the black community that preach one thing but live another way. And like this book mentioned most of these so called black leaders are funded by white people/corporations.
The one thing I didn't like was how certain terrible characters got off scott free but others that just got introduced half way through the book got punished way more than they needed to (even though they were racists and definitely deserved it).
The one thing I didn't like was how certain terrible characters got off scott free but others that just got introduced half way through the book got punished way more than they needed to (even though they were racists and definitely deserved it).
jazwazhere's review against another edition
dark
funny
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.5
great satirical story that criticizes the concept of race and Americas obsession with race, how race is used as a capitalist tool. satire is often done poorly but this book is a master class in satire, it’s actually funny and thought provoking