Hey, White Girl

In the summer of Woodstock and the moon landing, a traditional Virginia town forces its Black and White students to cross the city and integrate the schools, unraveling the predictable white path of the Randolph children and the plans their parents had for them.


Nell Randolph tries to make the best of her first year of high school at a black school. Her mother is unnerved by the changes she sees in Nell and arranges for her to transfer to a private girls' school. The Vietnam War is raging in the background, inciting fear of the draft for Donald, Nell's older brother, who involves Nell in decisions that change the trajectory of his life. Even the stability of their church life is challenged when a new priest comes to town.


Hey, White Girl by Judith Bice is told by an older Nell as she traces the fracture of her family through the lens of Civil Rights. Her memories and reflections reveal she is only at the beginning of understanding the complexities of family, race, and privilege. The reader is drawn into the narrator's experience and compelled to examine with her the personal consequences and responsibilities of cultural change.

1140436580
Hey, White Girl

In the summer of Woodstock and the moon landing, a traditional Virginia town forces its Black and White students to cross the city and integrate the schools, unraveling the predictable white path of the Randolph children and the plans their parents had for them.


Nell Randolph tries to make the best of her first year of high school at a black school. Her mother is unnerved by the changes she sees in Nell and arranges for her to transfer to a private girls' school. The Vietnam War is raging in the background, inciting fear of the draft for Donald, Nell's older brother, who involves Nell in decisions that change the trajectory of his life. Even the stability of their church life is challenged when a new priest comes to town.


Hey, White Girl by Judith Bice is told by an older Nell as she traces the fracture of her family through the lens of Civil Rights. Her memories and reflections reveal she is only at the beginning of understanding the complexities of family, race, and privilege. The reader is drawn into the narrator's experience and compelled to examine with her the personal consequences and responsibilities of cultural change.

15.99 In Stock
Hey, White Girl

Hey, White Girl

by Judith Bice

Narrated by Judith Bice

Unabridged — 9 hours, 16 minutes

Hey, White Girl

Hey, White Girl

by Judith Bice

Narrated by Judith Bice

Unabridged — 9 hours, 16 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$15.99
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $15.99

Overview

In the summer of Woodstock and the moon landing, a traditional Virginia town forces its Black and White students to cross the city and integrate the schools, unraveling the predictable white path of the Randolph children and the plans their parents had for them.


Nell Randolph tries to make the best of her first year of high school at a black school. Her mother is unnerved by the changes she sees in Nell and arranges for her to transfer to a private girls' school. The Vietnam War is raging in the background, inciting fear of the draft for Donald, Nell's older brother, who involves Nell in decisions that change the trajectory of his life. Even the stability of their church life is challenged when a new priest comes to town.


Hey, White Girl by Judith Bice is told by an older Nell as she traces the fracture of her family through the lens of Civil Rights. Her memories and reflections reveal she is only at the beginning of understanding the complexities of family, race, and privilege. The reader is drawn into the narrator's experience and compelled to examine with her the personal consequences and responsibilities of cultural change.


Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2022-01-04
It’s 1969 in Bice’s novel, and mandated busing has come to the Richmond, Virginia, schools.

The Randolphs are a White, middle-class Catholic family. Eleanor’s father is a lawyer. Nell, as she’s known, has an older brother, Donald, and a tightly wound mother, Marjorie. In the fall, Nell will be bused to Stonewall High, which is almost all Black and underfunded. Nell isn’t comfortable there but is determined to make the best of it and perhaps even to make some Black friends. She gets a small part in the fall play. The cast of Carousel is experimentally integrated, but when a Black-cast Billy Bigelow kisses a White-cast Julie Jordan, half the audience walks out and the local paper throws a fit. At semester’s end, Nell’s mother finds her a slot at a private White school, St. Mary’s. The nuns are racist (Nell, to her relief, is expelled), her classmates, clueless privileged snobs. She winds up, also to her relief, back at Stonewall. Nell’s father is a good man, trying to make the best of this situation and do the morally right thing. Her mother is not overtly racist, but she almost vibrates at this imposition, this disruption of her orderly, traditional life. Nell does make some Black friends, but those friendships are really fragile. We learn the story through Nell’s eyes, and a finely drawn character she is (as are others, especially the problematic Marjorie). We learn in the author blurb that Bice lived through that time as student and teacher, and her experiences inform every confrontation, every confusion. It’s important that in the epilogue, Nell is recalling in adulthood what she lived through and learned from. Thus, she can look back and trenchantly say, “My curated life was about to be challenged.” In the end, Nell can agree with Fergy Sutton, her Black almost-boyfriend, that the future is not without hope for the long haul but must be faced without rosy expectations for the short term.

A very sensitive, well-written treatment of a trying time and those who lived it.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159194824
Publisher: Atmosphere Press
Publication date: 05/09/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews