These Walls Between Us: A Memoir of Friendship Across Race and Class
By (Author) Wendy Sanford
She Writes Press
She Writes Press
18th November 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
305.800973
Paperback
328
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
" Unique offering in its genre: Few, if any, white people have written with such honesty about the workings of white supremacy in their lives, and there is much demand for this kind of book right now.
Timely: Since the murder of George Floyd made more white people aware of the long history of the torture and murder of Black people at the hands of whites, bookstores have seen heightened demand by white readers for works that will help them understand and take action to challenge white supremacy.
Well-connected author: The author is part of a wide network of feminist health activists who will welcome this book as a skillful step in naming the systemic racism that is a major public health hazard in the US."
2022 Page Turner Awards Finalist
2022 16th Annual National Indie Excellence Awards Finalist in Multicultural Non-Fiction
2022 Next Generation Indie Book Awards Finalist in Memoirs (Other) andSocial Justice
2022 Eric Hoffer First Horizon Book Awards Grand Prize Finalist 2022 Eric Hoffer Book Awards Honorable Mention in Memoir
2022 Nonfiction Authors Association Awards Gold Winner in Multicultural Nonfiction
2022 Nautilus Book Awards Silver Winner in Memoir/Large Publisher
2021 Best Book Awards Finalist in Multicultural: Nonfiction
A Notable 100 Book in the 2021 Shelf Unbound Best Indie Book Competition
2021 Hearten Book Awards Finalist
2021 Firebird Book AwardsFirst Place Winner in Multicultural Non-Fiction
2021 Firebird Book Awards Second Place Winner in Memoir
This tender and evocative story about friendship across racial and class lines is told with unflagging honesty and is an important guide for living in this time of racial reckoning.
Catherine Whitmire, author of Practicing Peace: A Devotional Walk through the Quaker Tradition and Plain Living: A Quaker Path to Simplicity
The politics are crystal clear at all levels, the characters are fascinating and its a superb read! Sanford presents the humanity of the characters, in all their contradictoriness, while remaining unrelenting in her condemnation of systemic racial and class violence. White people are all complicit in racism, and all responsible for taking it down, relationship by relationship. This memoir shows how tortuous and slippery that is . . . and yet, between humans who will recognize one another as such, always possible.
James Seale-Collazo, Faculty, Escuela Secondaria, University of Puerto Rico
This is powerful book with an important lesson that we all must learn in trying to understand othersa book that both blacks and whites should read so that we can enter into a productive dialogue with each other.
Rev. John Reynolds, author of The Fight for Freedom
A compelling take on how our personal experiences of racism arise from the history and structures of white supremacy, and an emotional glimpse into a lifetime anti-racism journey. Non-profit board members, government leaders, and executives from all sectors will be transformed by Wendys journey and her painfully earned pearls of wisdom in her effort to become an anti-racist white person.
Sue Gallagher, EdD, Chief Innovation Officer, Childrens Services Council of Broward County, FL
I found These Walls Between Us very informative, especially the way the author deconstructs the subtle and overt ways that white privilege influences the lives of so many. White privilege is like an invisible thread that maintains the status quo. Thank goodness Wendy Sanford is doing the work that only she can do!
Byllye Avery, MacArthur Genius Grant Winner, Founder, Black Women's Health Imperative
A repurposed white identity that separates itself from internalized white supremacist ideology brings joy and satisfaction to human rights work by embracing the power of hope and transformation. These Walls Between Us models such reclamation for everyone.
Loretta J. Ross, founder of Dred Feminist, activist, visiting associate professor at Smith College, and author of Reproductive Justice: An Introduction
Finally, a story from a white woman raised with help who interrogates the relationships complexities. As Wendy looks inwards to examine her socialization into a racial hierarchy and strives to break from her inherited role in order to step differently into a potential friendship with Mary, I found myself gripped by the overwhelming forces working against both of them. Their mutual love and courage to choose differently again and again renders a tender, honest, cringeworthy, and powerful read.
Debby Irving, author of Waking Up White: And Finding Myself in the Story of Race
This tender and evocative story about friendship across racial and class lines is an important guide for living into this time of racial reckoning. Sanfords unflinching honesty, insight, and wisdom had me saying, out loud, again and again, Wow, that is so true!
Catherine Whitmire, author of Practicing Peace: A Devotional Walk through the Quaker Tradition and Plain Living: A Quaker Path to Simplicity
A Black woman and a white woman forge a friendship against the odds. Unique, fascinating, and complex, Wendy Sanfords wonderful memoir is so rare and engaging that I read the book continuously over twelve hours without wanting to stop.
Peggy McIntosh, senior research scientist and former associate director of the Wellesley Centers for Women and author of White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack and On Privilege, Fraudulence, and Teaching As Learning: Selected Essays 19812019
In this beautifully written, bravely honest exploration, Wendy Sanford insightfully explores the class, racial, andto a lesser degreegender dynamics that emanate from and reinforce inequalities in the US. In doing so, she contributes significantly to our understanding of how those hierarchies are maintained.
Judith Rollins, Professor Emerita, Wellesley College, and author of Between Women: Domestics and Their Employers
From an author of the best-selling womens health classic Our Bodies, Ourselvescomes a bracingly forthright memoir about a lifelong friendship across racial and class divides. A white womans missteps and necessary lessons and a Black womans courageous co-creation make These Walls Between Usa tender, honest, cringeworthy, and powerful read.
Debby Irving, author ofWaking Up White
Wendy Sanford grew up in an upper-middle-class white suburban family in Princeton, New Jersey, and attended private schools throughout her life. During the socially turbulent time of the 1970s, she became a feminist, a lesbian, and a Quaker. A founding member of the Boston Womens Health Book Collective, Wendy coauthored and edited many versions of the womens health and sexuality classic Our Bodies, Ourselves from 1973 to 2011. In seminary at Harvard Divinity School in the 80s, she began to read works of women of color as devotional reading, to remedy her previous exclusive exposure to white and mostly male authors. She served for nearly a decade in campus ministry in the Boston area. In her fifties, she began reckon with her own white skin and the benefits that came to her through being white. In 2003, she earned an MFA in Writing from Vermont College. She is grateful to Mary Norman for partnering with her to create this book. She lives in Cambridge, MA, with Polly Attwood, her spouse of forty-one years.