Book description
Alfred White, a London park keeper, rules his home with a mixture
of ferocity and tenderness that has estranged his three children. But
family ties are strong, and when Alfred collapses on duty one day,
they rush to be with him. His daughter's partner, Elroy, a black
social worker, is brought face to face with Alfred's younger son Dirk,
who hates and fears all black people, and the scene is set for
violence, forcing Alfred's wife May to choose between justice and
kinship. This groundbreaking novel takes on the taboo subject of
racial hatred as it looks at love, hatred, sex, comedy and death in an
ordinary British family. Â The White Family points to new directions
in British writing. Full of power and passion, as well as somte timely
warnings, this is one of the year's finest novels, and it deserves the
widest possible readership.' Literary Review  Intensely touching,
full of ironies, situational and verbal, [and] brilliantly connected
with contemporary society.' Financial Times  The White Family tackles
an unspeakable subject with quiet courage. Beautifully written, it
tells the complex story of racism from the point of view of the
perpetrators. The result is an astonishing examination of the changes,
complexities and difficulties at the heart of a multi-ethnic suburban
community.' The Big Issue  A transcendent work, splitting open a
family to bare the rough edges of prejudice, self-righteousness and
petulant self-justification that we all recognise. The words of James
Baldwin resonate throughout: Â Books taught me that the things that
tormented me the most were the things that connected me to everyone
who was alive and who had ever been alive.' Daily Telegraph  Gee's
book is bold because of her willingness to write about the living,
shifting present. An unashamedly contemporary novel Â- a millennium
novel, if you like Â- that embraces the ideological and emotional
chaos of our times.  The Independent  Skilful structure and tender,
precise prose.' The Observer  Picking up where Toni Morrison leaves
off, Gee reminds us that racism not only devastates the lives of its
victims, but also those of its perpetrators. Like Eugene O'Neill,
Maggie Gee moves skilfully between compassion and disgust.' TLS Â
Elegant style and an expert ear for dialogue  courageous, honest,
powerfully real and not a little disturbing.' The Times  Full of good
writing.' The Spectator  Maggie Gee is one of our most ambitious and
challenging novelists.' The Spectator  The White Family is an
audacious, groundbreaking conditionof- England novel which tilts
expertly at a middle class fallacy that racism is something  out
thereâ , in the football terraces or the sink estates  Finely
judged and compulsively readable.' The Guardian  Outstanding Â
tender, sexy and alarming.' Jim Crace  A brilliant depiction of
British society.' Bernardine Evaristo