The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother by James McBride, Lainie Kazan (Performed by), Andre Braugher (Performed by)

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(Compact Disc - Unabridged)

  • Pub. Date: May 2006
  • Sales Rank: 95,974

    Reader Rating: (164 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2006
    • Publisher: Phoenix Books, Incorporated
    • Format: Compact Disc
    • Sales Rank: 95,974

    Synopsis

    This national bestseller tells the story of James McBride and his mother—a rabbi's daughter, born in Poland and raised in the South, who fled to Harlem, married a black man, founded a church, and put 12 children through college. Unabridged. 6 CDs.

    Annotation

    Around the narrative of Ruth McBride Jordan, a.k.a. Rachel Deborah Shilsky, the daughter of an angry, failed Orthodox Jewish rabbi in the South, her son James writes of the inner confusions he felt as a black child of a white mother and of the love and faith with which his mother surrounded their large family. The result is a powerful portrait of growing up, a meditation on race and identity, and a poignant, beautifully crafted hymn from a son to his mother.

    Salon - James Marcus

    At a time when the relationship between African-Americans and Jews is deeply fissured, The Color of Water reminds us that the two groups have a long history of coexistence -- sometimes within a single person. The author's mother, Ruth Shilsky, was born in Poland in 1920, the daughter of an Orthodox Jewish rabbi. She grew up in rural Virginia, hemmed in by anti-Semitism and small-town claustrophobia, and at the age of 18 she fled to the cultural antipodes of Harlem. There, four years later, she married a black man named Dennis McBride, and since her family promptly disowned her, she launched a second existence as (to quote her son) "a flying compilation of competing interests and conflicts, a black woman in white skin." The lone Caucasian in her Brooklyn housing project, she somehow raised 12 children without ever quite admitting she was white. In retrospect, of course, her son is able to recognize that his parents "brought a curious blend of Jewish-European and African-American distrust and paranoia into our house." However, as children, James McBride and his 11 siblings didn't dwell on questions of their mother's color. Only later, after he became a professional journalist, did McBride feel compelled to tackle the riddle of his heritage. Bit by bit, he coaxed out his mother's story, and her voice -- stoic, funny, and with a matter-of-fact flintiness -- alternates perfectly with his own tale of biracial confusion and self-discovery.

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    Biography

    James McBride burst onto the scene with The Color of Water, a memoir exploring the author's struggle to understand his biracial identity. A bit of a Renaissance man -- he's a skilled musician who has written for the likes of soul diva Anita Baker -- McBride crossed over into the fiction camp with the war novel Miracle at St. Anna.

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    Customer Reviews

    The Color of Water - Amazing!by Missive65

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    October 19, 2009: Well worth the read or listen (CD)! Entertaining and heartwarming. A wonderful insight into racial American history as well as family dynamics.

    Kudos to the author for sharing his family with the world.

    what can i sayby neccy

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    September 06, 2009: how i loved this book..i would have to say,it is one of my favorite books..this book is not only a tribute to mc brides mother,it is a tribute to anyone who has dealt with such hardships and has overcome them and hidden them in order to raise a family...it takes a very special person to accomplish what mrs. mc bride did..she deserves all the accolades she gets,,and mr mc bride has done a wonderful job by paying this tribute to her ...hats off to all the mc bride children,,,,,,,,,,


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