
Token Black Girl
A Memoir
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Narrated by:
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Danielle Prescod
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By:
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Danielle Prescod
Racial identity, pop culture, and delusions of perfection collide in an eye-opening and refreshingly frank memoir by fashion and beauty insider Danielle Prescod.
Danielle Prescod grew up Black in an elite and overwhelmingly white community, her identity made more invisible by the whitewashed movies, television, magazines, and books she and her classmates voraciously consumed. Danielle took her cue from the world around her and aspired to shrink her identity into that box, setting increasingly poisonous goals. She started painful and damaging chemical hair treatments in elementary school, began depriving herself of food when puberty hit, and tried to control her image through the most unimpeachable, impeccable fashion choices.
Those obsessions led her to relentlessly pursue a career in beauty and fashion—the eye of the racist and sexist beauty standard storm. Assimilating was hard, but she was practiced. And she was an asset. Their “Token Black Girl.” Toxic, sure. But Danielle was striving to achieve social cache and working her way up the ladder of coveted media jobs, and she looked great, right? So what if she had to endure executives’ questions like “What was it like to drive to school from the ghetto?” Or coworkers’ eager curiosity to know if her parents were on welfare. But after decades of burying her emotions, resentment, and true self, Danielle turned a critical eye inward and confronted the factors that motivated her self-destructive behaviors.
Sharp witted and bracingly candid, Token Black Girl unpacks the adverse effects of insidious white supremacy in the media—both unconscious and strategic—to tell a personal story about recovery from damaging concepts of perfection, celebrating identity, and demolishing social conditioning.
©2022 Danielle Prescod (P)2022 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
“Former BET.com style director Prescod narrates her scathingly honest life story and social analysis about living and working in predominantly white spaces.… As a narrator, Prescod speaks with a matter-of-fact tone, changing inflections only when mimicking the various microaggressions and racist remarks that she was subjected to.… More than half of the audio covers Prescod's eating disorder; these passages are relayed frankly and without pretense. A unique expose of fashion media that is recommended for fans of Kenya Hunt's Girl Gurl Grrrl or Tressie McMillan Cottom's Thick.”—Library Journal
“A trenchant, honest, and unique memoir about body image, fashion, and Blackness.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Former BET style director Prescod lays bare the toxic scaffolding of the fashion and beauty industries in her piercing debut…As she reckons with [these] small- and large-scale oppressions, Prescod maintains a striking self-awareness and even hope that these problems have solutions. The result is sure to galvanize those who are looking to make change from within fraught spaces.”—Publishers Weekly
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Best book I’ve read all year
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I Wanted To Like It
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Danielle Prescod's view on racism...
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It’s thoughtfully written and lays bare the things that black women deal with daily. I know black men have it tough, too, but we’re focusing on us right now.
I, too, have been the “only” in countless situations. I’ve left jobs because I was treated as though I didn’t matter and people seemed surprised that I would actually value myself more than a job that was a guaranteed paycheck with guaranteed annual raises. I even surprised myself.
Well done, Danielle. I’m proud of you for finally choosing you - and a better version of you, at that.
Wow - a must-read
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Honest and Real
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Important issues addressed
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Good
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Must Read
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I also think this is an important book for HR professionals, educators of adults, and teachers of grades 5-12 to read.
Lastly, this book highlights that money does not compensate for bias. Being raised with educational and cultural advantages does not change how the world treats persons of color and especially women of color. I hope digesting the lessons herein will make be a better ally.
Awareness comes listening
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Interesting story…
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