Redlined Audiobook By Linda Gartz cover art

Redlined

A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago

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Redlined

By: Linda Gartz
Narrated by: Robin Miles, Moe Egan
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About this listen

Set against the backdrop of the Civil Rights Movement, Redlined exposes the racist lending rules that refuse mortgages to anyone in areas with even one black resident. As blacks move deeper into Chicago’s West Side during the 1960s, whites flee by the thousands. But Linda Gartz’s parents, Fred and Lil, choose to stay in their integrating neighborhood, overcoming previous prejudices as they meet and form friendships with their African American neighbors.

The community sinks into increasing poverty and crime after two race riots destroy its once vibrant business district, but Fred and Lil continue to nurture their three apartment buildings and tenants for the next 20 years in a devastated landscape even as their own relationship cracks and withers.

After her parents’ deaths, Gartz discovers long-hidden letters, diaries, documents, and photos stashed in the attic of her former home. Determined to learn what forces shattered her parents’ marriage and undermined her community, she searches through the family archives and immerses herself in books on racial change in American neighborhoods.

Told through the lens of Gartz’s discoveries of the personal and political, Redlined delivers a riveting story of a community fractured by racial turmoil, an unraveling and conflicted marriage, a daughter’s fight for sexual independence, and an up-close, intimate view of the racial and social upheavals of the 1960s.

©2018 Linda Gartz (P)2023 Linda Gartz
African American Studies Biographies & Memoirs Black & African American Sociology United States Chicago Marriage
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The personal affects of redlining

I liked that this book showed what life was like from a personal standpoint in a neighborhood that was pressured by racial discrimination. The book does cover some aspects of the broader social history. What I learned was that economics, maybe even more than race was used to pit the races against each other. Sad, but true, but people lived to survive it somehow. Still, her question about why a neighborhood turns into something like Berlin after World War II while some don't is a good one.

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