Defending Alice : A Novel of Love and Race in the Roaring Twenties
(2022)

Fiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : HarperAudio, 2022
Made available through hoopla
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (19hr., 15 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9780063115491 MWT15973256, 0063115492 15973256
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Read by Joel Froomkin, James Anderson Foster and Imani Jade Powers

Set in 1920s New York, an addictive, thoroughly entertaining historical novel involving sex and secrets, race and redemption, and power and privilege-based on a sensational real-life case that made international headlines-in which the marriage between a working-class Black woman and the scion of one of America's most powerful white families ends in a scandalous annulment lawsuit. When Alice Jones, a blue-color woman with at least one Black grandparent marries Leonard "Kip" Rhinelander, the son of one of New York's most prominent society families, the scandal rocks high society-and eventually sets the city afire when Kip later sues for an annulment, accusing Alice of having hidden her "Negro blood" and intentionally deceiving him that she was white. While New York society in the Roaring Twenties witnessed more than a few scandals, the real-life Rhinelander case set tongues wagging and became perhaps the most examined interracial relationship in American history. In Defending Alice Richard Stratton reimagines this remarkable story, from the couple's courtship through their controversial marriage to their shocking divorce trial and its aftermath. Chronicled by Alice's attorney, brilliant trial lawyer Lee Parsons Davis, and told in flashbacks and entries from Alice and Kip's fictional personal diaries, this epic thriller vividly brings to life the New York of a century ago-a world seemingly far removed yet tragically familiar to our own. Stratton brilliantly evokes this dazzling era in all its glamour and excess, and in retelling the Rhinelander story, explores issues of sex, race, class, prejudice, and justice that are as relevant today as they were a century ago when this headline-making trial took place

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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