Gilded Years

A Novel

582 pages

English language

Published April 4, 2016 by Thorndike Press.

ISBN:
978-1-4104-9261-6
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2 stars (2 reviews)

"Since childhood, Anita Hemmings has longed to attend the country's most exclusive school for women, Vassar College. Now, a bright, beautiful senior in the class of 1897, she is hiding a secret that would have banned her from admission: Anita is the only African-American student ever to attend Vassar. With her olive complexion and dark hair, this daughter of a janitor and descendant of slaves has successfully passed as white, but now finds herself rooming with Louise "Lottie" Taylor, the scion of one of New York's most prominent families. Though Anita has kept herself at a distance from her classmates, Lottie's sphere of influence is inescapable, her energy irresistible, and the two become fast friends. Pulled into her elite world, Anita learns what it's like to be treated as a wealthy, educated white woman--the person everyone believes her to be--and even finds herself in a heady romance with a moneyed …

3 editions

Review of 'The gilded years' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

This was a DNF for me. I got up to the part where Anita reveals her "secret" to the reader - which is not a secret to any reader who already read the back copy - so I don't know how anything else in the book fares, but I don't think this is for me. For one, the amount of exposition in dialogue is distractingly high. Characters speak in paragraphs telling the reader all sorts of things people wouldn't actually say in an actual conversation, which I think is just bad writing. Secondly, and maybe this is racially petty, but I feel like this should be an #OwnVoices book. I know the author is half Japanese/half white and I'm sure has her own perspective on what it's like to be that biracial-composition, I'm not sure she's the right person to be writing a story about a black woman passing for …

Review of 'The gilded years' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I loved this story of a woman trying to get an education at Vassar before they accepted African-American students.  Her life is compared and contrasted to the life of her brother who was enrolled as a Negro student at newly desegregated MIT.  Where he is able to live relatively freely because the racists just ignored and/or avoided him, her attempts to keep from drawing attention to herself were thwarted by a roommate who is determined to be best friends.  Lottie drags Anita into a high class social life and introduces her to people who she knows wouldn't talk to her if they knew she was black.The book addresses the pain of having to cut family members out of your life if you are passing.The author did a good job of incorporating the views of many different types of people - black people who saw this as a practical …

Subjects

  • Fiction, general