The Other Black Girl

The Other Black Girl

Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe, Englisch)

25,99 €

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Hörbuch

44,99 €

The Other Black Girl

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Hörbuch

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Beschreibung

Details

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.06.2021

Verlag

Atria

Seitenzahl

368

Beschreibung

Details

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.06.2021

Verlag

Atria

Seitenzahl

368

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,4/3,5 cm

Gewicht

528 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-982160-13-5

Das meinen unsere Kund*innen

4.0

2 Bewertungen

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An unsettling page turner

Bewertung aus Basel am 02.08.2021

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

An original and engaging story of race, young adulthood, and workplace politics. The ending doesn’t quite live up to the promise of the beginning and middle, but ultimately it’s a fun and unique social commentary that leaves the reader with many interesting questions to ponder.

An unsettling page turner

Bewertung aus Basel am 02.08.2021
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

An original and engaging story of race, young adulthood, and workplace politics. The ending doesn’t quite live up to the promise of the beginning and middle, but ultimately it’s a fun and unique social commentary that leaves the reader with many interesting questions to ponder.

Zakiya Dalila Harris - The Other Black Girl

Miss.mesmerized am 01.06.2021

Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

Nella Rogers has achieved what she could only dream of, at 26 she is editorial assistant at one of the most prestigious publishing houses. The only thing she has been struggling with the last two years is how the idea of diversity has never entered her workplace, after the Asian girl left, she is the only person with a different background. Things change when unexpectedly Hazel is employed and gets the cubicle next to her. Nella senses immediately that with another black girl, they might finally make a change in publishing, promote more diverse authors and bring forward new topics relevant to a large audience which wasn’t addressed so far. However, it does not take too long until Nella’s work life starts to go downhill. Zakiya Dalila Harris’ debut novel has been called one of the buzz books of 2021 by several magazines. I was intrigued by the blurb immediately, a kind of horror version of “The Devil Wars Prada” sounded totally enthralling. For a long time, “The Other Black Girl” could fulfil the expectations, there is a highly uncomfortable feeling creeping around, yet, the end was a bit too much for my liking. Nella is quite a likeable young woman, hardworking and even though not an activist she is following the Black Lives Matter movement even before this becomes a widespread phenomenon and big news. She imagines being able of making a change in the publishing industry but first needs to get at the position where she has the actual power to do so. Therefore, she is quite assimilated and she swallows comments from her colleagues even though they might be quite offensive for persons of colour. With the arrival of Hazel she seems to get an ally and befriends her immediately. For the reader, even though there are some chapters which seems unrelated to Nella’s story but hint at some goings-ons beyond her scope, it is obvious that Hazel is not the friendly and reliable colleague Nella assumes, this was an aspect which annoyed me a bit, I didn’t get the impression of Nelly being that naive and credulous at first and would have liked her to be a bit cleverer in relation to what happens at her workplace. The novel, however, is quite strong at portraying Nella’s feelings as being the only black girl, the role she assigned to as representative of a totally diverse group which is just too simplistic, yet, nobody really seems to care about the concept of diversity, having one black girl is enough. She has other issues than her colleagues, especially the talk about hair was quite a novelty, even though this is a huge topic if you do not have the easy-care blond hair. Overall, I liked the writing and found Nella’s perspective and the insight in the publishing world interestingly realised.

Zakiya Dalila Harris - The Other Black Girl

Miss.mesmerized am 01.06.2021
Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

Nella Rogers has achieved what she could only dream of, at 26 she is editorial assistant at one of the most prestigious publishing houses. The only thing she has been struggling with the last two years is how the idea of diversity has never entered her workplace, after the Asian girl left, she is the only person with a different background. Things change when unexpectedly Hazel is employed and gets the cubicle next to her. Nella senses immediately that with another black girl, they might finally make a change in publishing, promote more diverse authors and bring forward new topics relevant to a large audience which wasn’t addressed so far. However, it does not take too long until Nella’s work life starts to go downhill. Zakiya Dalila Harris’ debut novel has been called one of the buzz books of 2021 by several magazines. I was intrigued by the blurb immediately, a kind of horror version of “The Devil Wars Prada” sounded totally enthralling. For a long time, “The Other Black Girl” could fulfil the expectations, there is a highly uncomfortable feeling creeping around, yet, the end was a bit too much for my liking. Nella is quite a likeable young woman, hardworking and even though not an activist she is following the Black Lives Matter movement even before this becomes a widespread phenomenon and big news. She imagines being able of making a change in the publishing industry but first needs to get at the position where she has the actual power to do so. Therefore, she is quite assimilated and she swallows comments from her colleagues even though they might be quite offensive for persons of colour. With the arrival of Hazel she seems to get an ally and befriends her immediately. For the reader, even though there are some chapters which seems unrelated to Nella’s story but hint at some goings-ons beyond her scope, it is obvious that Hazel is not the friendly and reliable colleague Nella assumes, this was an aspect which annoyed me a bit, I didn’t get the impression of Nelly being that naive and credulous at first and would have liked her to be a bit cleverer in relation to what happens at her workplace. The novel, however, is quite strong at portraying Nella’s feelings as being the only black girl, the role she assigned to as representative of a totally diverse group which is just too simplistic, yet, nobody really seems to care about the concept of diversity, having one black girl is enough. She has other issues than her colleagues, especially the talk about hair was quite a novelty, even though this is a huge topic if you do not have the easy-care blond hair. Overall, I liked the writing and found Nella’s perspective and the insight in the publishing world interestingly realised.

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The Other Black Girl

von Zakiya Dalila Harris

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