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Soul Sister (30th Anniversary Edition)

Soul Sister (30th Anniversary Edition)

List Price: $9.50
Your Price: $9.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Color Is Human.
Review: A very interesting book. Halsell has a history of putting herself in untenable positions purely to find out what they are like ("She has lived on a fishing junk in Hong Kong with a Chinese family of twenty-eight, traveled 2,000 miles down the Amazon by tug, and has crossed the Andes by jeep."), and then writing about them (her newspaper journalism has been "datelined Russia, China, Korea, and Vietnam"). Inspired by Griffin's "Black Like Me", she undertook to change the color of her skin (the process and results of which are a story unto themselves at the beginning of the book), donned dark contact lenses, and embarked on a journey through Harlem and Jackson, Mississippi in skin that was not her own.

The extreme sides of bigotry and compassion that she encountered are an account worth reading for any American, white or black, who is curious about how we humans receive eachother. It must be pointed out however that as a rather privileged white American, Halsell was left still lacking the experience of being raised black in our still-strictured country. Still, for lacking this total viewpoint, her "discoveries" are remarkably compelling on a simply human level (a point at which perhaps all things should be judged).

Whether she was wrong or right to do what she did, she did it for her own reasons, and indeed resisted withholding the truth of her real person from many of her black companions, preferring honesty (and being treated with dislike in some cases) to deceit. Overall very worthwhile reading, if only to provoke oneself into thinking about things many of us would prefer to ignore and let lie in the back of our heads instead of openly and objectively considering. And please, don't try to make yourself feel better when reading by saying, "Oh, well, this happened thirty years ago," when we should all be aware that these invisible walls and boundaries still exist all around us even today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Color Is Human.
Review: A very interesting book. Halsell has a history of putting herself in untenable positions purely to find out what they are like ("She has lived on a fishing junk in Hong Kong with a Chinese family of twenty-eight, traveled 2,000 miles down the Amazon by tug, and has crossed the Andes by jeep."), and then writing about them (her newspaper journalism has been "datelined Russia, China, Korea, and Vietnam"). Inspired by Griffin's "Black Like Me", she undertook to change the color of her skin (the process and results of which are a story unto themselves at the beginning of the book), donned dark contact lenses, and embarked on a journey through Harlem and Jackson, Mississippi in skin that was not her own.

The extreme sides of bigotry and compassion that she encountered are an account worth reading for any American, white or black, who is curious about how we humans receive eachother. It must be pointed out however that as a rather privileged white American, Halsell was left still lacking the experience of being raised black in our still-strictured country. Still, for lacking this total viewpoint, her "discoveries" are remarkably compelling on a simply human level (a point at which perhaps all things should be judged).

Whether she was wrong or right to do what she did, she did it for her own reasons, and indeed resisted withholding the truth of her real person from many of her black companions, preferring honesty (and being treated with dislike in some cases) to deceit. Overall very worthwhile reading, if only to provoke oneself into thinking about things many of us would prefer to ignore and let lie in the back of our heads instead of openly and objectively considering. And please, don't try to make yourself feel better when reading by saying, "Oh, well, this happened thirty years ago," when we should all be aware that these invisible walls and boundaries still exist all around us even today.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: BLACK LIKE HER
Review: GRACE HALSELL WAS INTRIGUED BY THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN HOW THE BLACK AMERICANS LIVED AND THE WHITE AMERICANS. AFTER A GREAT DEAL OF INDICISION SHE INGESTED A COMPOUND THAT WOULD TURN HER SKIN BLACK, THUS BEGAN HER ADVENTURES. A FEW THINGS WERE STRIKING: ONE WAS THE VULNERBILITY OF BLACK PEOPLE, THEY SEEM TO HAVE NO DEFENSE, AND HER CONCLUSION THAT PEOPLE BECOME BOUND TO EACH OTHER FROM THE PRACTICE OF HURTING EACH OTHER. IT IS NOT A BORING BOOK.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: BLACK LIKE HER
Review: GRACE HALSELL WAS INTRIGUED BY THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN HOW THE BLACK AMERICANS LIVED AND THE WHITE AMERICANS. AFTER A GREAT DEAL OF INDICISION SHE INGESTED A COMPOUND THAT WOULD TURN HER SKIN BLACK, THUS BEGAN HER ADVENTURES. A FEW THINGS WERE STRIKING: ONE WAS THE VULNERBILITY OF BLACK PEOPLE, THEY SEEM TO HAVE NO DEFENSE, AND HER CONCLUSION THAT PEOPLE BECOME BOUND TO EACH OTHER FROM THE PRACTICE OF HURTING EACH OTHER. IT IS NOT A BORING BOOK.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read!
Review: This book is a must read. I have read it twice, loaned out my copy, it's falling apart and I will order another one. I think I like it a bit better than BLACK LIKE ME, but both will leave you shocked and shattered. Things have changed, but things haven't changed, too, and I as a Caucasian male do not doubt that this book is as relevant today as when it was written.

Ms. Halsell (sadly, she died in August 2000) sees that the issues she is confronting and dealing with can't be simply ascribed to "race" issues, but go deeper, to matters of the human heart and the isolation that each one of us must bear and deal with as individual human beings in a world of sin and suffering and pain. Hence, she doesn't come to the easy answer of "If only Blacks and Whites (or Jews and Gentiles or Hispanics or American Indians or Palestinians and Israelis, etc.) would understand each other better, these problems wouldn't exist." She won't be that simplistic, and for that reason, SOUL SISTER raises (or should raise) larger issues in the readers' minds than the subject matter might lead one to expect.

Read it. Read it now. Read it often.


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