
Loving Day
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Narrated by:
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J. D. Jackson
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By:
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Mat Johnson
On his first night in his new home, Warren spies two figures in the grass outside; when he screws up the nerve to confront them, they disappear. The next day he encounters ghosts of a different kind: In the face of the teenage girl he meets at a comics convention, he sees the mingled features of his white father and his black mother, both now dead. The girl is his daughter, and she thinks she's white.
Warren sets off to remake his life with a reluctant daughter he never knew and a haunted house and history he knows too well. In their search for a new life, they struggle with an unwanted house and its ghosts, fall in with a utopian mixed-race cult, and inspire a riot on Loving Day, the unsung holiday that celebrates interracial love.
©2015 Spiegel & Grau, an imprint of Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. (P)2015 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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thoroughly entertaining
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made me think about an issue that was new to me.
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Simply wonderful.
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I loved this book!
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1) by mistakenly and repeatedly framing Jews as “European” and not a Levantine people, some of whom were exiled to Europe, the author misses a great opportunity to illustrate the ways that many non-European immigrant groups in the US perform whiteness and uphold anti-blackness in exchange for conditional privilege. This would have been a particularly salient point in a book that touches so much on performative identity and trying to find your place in the hierarchy when you don’t fit perfect binaries.
2) The narrator mispronounces “Tal” throughout the entire book and it drives me nuts. It isn’t Tal rhyming with pal. It rhymes with Gal Gadot’s name. Closer to rhyming with ball, but not quite because it’s a Hebrew vowel that doesn’t translate perfectly.
Overall I enjoyed the book, but these two issues were definitely a distraction for me.
Some distracting errors but good overall.
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The character seemed more like stereotypes than people and the
situations and their responses never rang true for me. Emily Bazelon recommended this book on a podcast and I will ignore her literary suggestions in the future.
Teen lit with heavy erotic imagery
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Any additional comments?
I wanted to like this book more than I did. Loving Day is a satire about personal and public views of multiracial identity. I wish the characters had more to their stories than their attitudes about being black and/or white, their failed or struggling relationships, and some Scooby Doo-style antics. The plot frustrated me, but I did enjoy Johnson's writing style and humor.Although the emphasis on race felt claustrophobic at times, it was interesting to hear one perspective on being multiracial and being misperceived or forced to choose sides by others (even if those others are often caricatures). I know it's not fair to expect a book about multiracial identity to reflect everyone's experience in that broad domain, but I was still a bit disappointed that the story's focus only on the black/white multiracial experience and the total absence of happy interracial marriages left my family out.
Race, identity & Scooby Doo
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At last , Real issues with gravitas and humor
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Attention grabbing with a good story line.
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Genetic/Socio/ethnic differences are the thematic subject of Johnson’s story. Society judges human difference as good or bad. The author’s conclusion is that people are people. Society should accept people for what they are; until then, discrimination and unequal treatment will be like an unrenovated house that will either be moved from one place to another or destroyed.
ONE DROP
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