Reviews

Negroland by Margo Jefferson

jeweleemc's review

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challenging emotional informative reflective slow-paced

3.25

The format of the book was hard to understand at first, once you get into it, it gets easier 

sgreenleaf's review

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4.0

Beautiful, experimental, upsetting, raw, radical.

amjammi's review

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4.0

An amalgam of social history, literary criticism, and personal experience - this book is unlike any other memoir I've read.

antoinettelori's review against another edition

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3.0

Negroland

Margo's memoir dives into her life experiences of growing up in the suburbs of Chicago during the tumultuous 60s and 70s. Despite belonging to a well-off family, Margo's family faced the harsh reality of racism and the constant pressure to fit into a society that was not always welcoming of people of color. Through her storytelling, she sheds light on the fact that one's social status does not exempt them from being seen and treated as a black person, and she highlights the existence of various terms used to describe the elite black community, such as the colored aristocracy, colored elite, colored 400, 400, blue vein society, big families, old families, old settlers, pioneers Negro society, black society, Negro, black, African-American upper class or elite.

In her memoir, Margo also touches on her feelings of being white-passing, which is still a prevalent issue today. She discusses the evolution of relaxers, natural hair, and weaves and how they have impacted the black community's perception of beauty and acceptance. Ultimately, Margo emphasizes the constant need to fit in, which is something that many people of color can relate to and understand.

jasminedaria's review against another edition

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I couldn’t understand the direction of the book. The chapters were weirdly laid out, did not make a clear argument, and did not have a general direction. I may try again at some later point, but this book is not for me right now.

ynit_g's review against another edition

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reflective medium-paced

3.75

The childhood parts felt like a solid 5 stars but the adult sections especially the last two chapters were hard to read

I'm not really sure the purpose of this book either? 
The childhood parts were a good insight in like in the 50s being upper(middle) class black people but then the rest feels like a lot of anything?
There's not much to connect to that
the depression section was boring

I wouldn't really recommend it to others but I didn't hate the book it's just hella confusing on purpose or what the author wanted me to feel or take away if anything at all

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lemonmarch's review against another edition

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challenging dark funny hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

3.0

daenjou's review against another edition

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emotional reflective medium-paced

3.5

emeraldgarnet's review against another edition

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2.0

The earlier sections where the author discussed her young childhood are the best parts. As the author describes more recent events, the writing grows disjointed.

cecile87's review

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3.0

I'm having trouble with all the tone changes. I did appreciate the history at the beginning. I reverberated to some of the trials she experienced as I am also a black woman in this country. Call me dense, but the Little Women references eluded me. It's been more that 40 years since I read the book and I was never interested in any of the cinematic versions.

I don't know to whom she was directing her story. Some members of my book club felt she was writing to white folks and not to us as black women. Some felt that had Margo been happy about her status in Negroland, she would have never written the book. If she had risen to the top tier of this group, she'd be like the rest--silent about it.

I've been slogging through this memoir and probably won't finish it.