#CBR10 Review #20: Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley
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"For eighteen years I've believed what other people told me about what was right and what was wrong. From now. I'm deciding.”
I have seen a few very favorable reviews of
this YA novel already, and I must say that I too really liked it for both the
clear writing style, but also the handling of the serious subject matter therein, though I do think that perhaps one side of the story was much stronger than the other.
Lies
We Tell Ourselves shifts between the perspectives
of two different students during integration in 1959 Virginia, named Sarah and
Linda. Sarah is one of the first black students to attend an all-white school
in their town along with her sister and a few fellow classmates, while Linda is
a white student who opposes integration and whose father is a loud media voice
against it. Sarah and her fellow black classmates endure daily harassment and
violence, while Linda believes this is just a problem for her and her fellow
white students as those who to “force” integration are “agitators”. Of course,
the two opposing students are soon forced to interact… and from there we get
our major story of the two sides resisting to come together at first, but then
finding some understanding. There are some interesting plot points here, but
some of them you really can see coming quite early on. I wouldn’t, however, say
that this predictability ruined my enjoyment of the story in any way.
There is a lot to unpack in the complicated
subject of integration and race, and while at first I didn’t want to know what
Linda thought of it all, it was interesting to see just where certain ideas can
come from and how they may change: she herself has personal struggles though
they may be different from those of Sarah. But ultimately, it is Sarah who is
the star of this story in my opinion, as her dialogue centers more firmly on
the narrative of integration, but then also incorporates so many other themes
and layers of sexuality, the idea of wrongness and sin in the self, the roles
and expectations of women during this time period (Linda also touches on this),
etc etc.
The subject matter here is important, and
it is clear that Talley put in research to try and create a very real sense of
constant impending threat that the black students experience. While this book
does contain violence, the author’s note at the end illuminates that some
schools during this time integrated without much incident, while others had
much more violence and even deaths that occurred from it.
Given that this novel is aimed at young
adult readers, I am not surprised nor too disappointed in the way things wrap
up seemingly happily and without much incident at the end. Though, the pacing
was a little odd as it almost seemed like a climactic point was reached just
after the halfway point, then the novel began to introduce all new plotlines
which then had to be wrapped up quite hastily before the end, in my opinion.
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