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Breaking Away
 
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Breaking Away [Hardcover]

Kristin Hunter Lattany (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1, 2003
Bethesda Barnes has reached a point in life where she at last feels comfortable. She loves her family, despite a stormy relationship with her mother. For romance, there’s Lloyd Bounds, a devoted postal clerk. Although, cards on the table, Beth wouldn’t mind a ring. Ask Beth what part of her life is truly fulfilling and she just might answer “my beautiful career.”

After landing a plum teaching position at an Ivy League college, Dr. Barnes focuses her energies on her students, even the obnoxious ones, encouraging them all to “always strive for more.” Though driven and dedicated, Beth is fairly detached from her faculty colleagues, well aware that she is one of the only black faces in a sea of white. Despite the disparity, she loves her job and pursues it with gusto. Until an incident on campus rocks her world—and forces her to confront society’s uglier side.

Late one night, four African American sorority sisters are called vile names and assailed with garbage. The students decide to charge the boys with assault and racial insensitivity for violating the university’s harassment code. They ask Beth to be their faculty advisor for the case.

When Beth accepts, she walks into a racially charged firestorm of heated protest and dangerous threats. It turns out that one of the boys is a skinhead who seems to have sympathizers in high places. When the case goes national, even the editorial boards of presumably liberal newspapers criticize the victims and their cause. Though some of girls drop out of the case, and her personal life is blindsided by tragedy, Beth perseveres with the cause, believing some things are worth fighting for . . . especially in the name of justice.

A powerful novel that boldly takes on large, important themes while telling an intimate story of a courageous woman, Breaking Away is Kristin Lattany’s most persuasive and searing novel to date.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

An African-American professor at an Ivy League university becomes immersed in a race controversy in this politically charged novel by Lattany (Do Unto Others). For seven years, Dr. Bethesda Barnes has been a popular literature professor at the unnamed university where she herself was an undergraduate in the 1970s. Her courses on black literature are always overflowing but, though she's a favorite with students, Beth has kept herself apart from the faculty. She hesitates to form relationships with white professors on a campus where she still feels somewhat alienated, yet she doesn't fully acknowledge her own discomfort, preferring not to make waves. When a group of black sorority sisters is harassed by white male students, the women ask Beth to be their faculty sponsor in a lawsuit challenging the university's harassment code. Beth agrees, even though she's not entirely sympathetic to their cause, and suddenly finds herself all too visible: students drop out of her classes; she receives violent threats; her job is on the line; and both blacks and whites find reasons to berate her. The controversy, along with the deaths of two of her relatives, force her to examine her ideas about justice and her own deep-seated attitudes about race, nurtured by her protective parents. Lattany's provocative narrative plunges spirited characters into explosive social situations, posing timely questions about the state of race relations on campus.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Bethesda Barnes, a literature professor at an Ivy League college in Philadelphia, is shaken from her complacency when four of her students ask her to assist them in a complaint alleging racial harassment. The four black coeds, practicing a sorority pledge routine on the commons late one evening, were accosted by white male students who used profanity, shouted epithets, and threw objects at them. Beth reluctantly agrees to help the students and is plunged into the whirl of the racial hatred just beneath the surface at the university, where black students find a hostile environment and skinheads challenge racial diversity. The death of Beth's father and later her sister, Bonita, a New Jersey cop killed under mysterious circumstances, compels Beth to face the fact that her parents have sheltered her from the realities of racial bigotry and hatred. She struggles for the inner strength to handle her current career crisis--the threat of losing her position if she doesn't encourage the coeds to drop their complaint--and a promising romantic relationship. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: One World/Ballantine; 1 edition (April 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345442490
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345442499
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,342,127 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Clean Break, April 8, 2003
By 
Nicole McCurty (Chesapeake, VA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Breaking Away (Hardcover)
In Breaking Away by Kristen Lattany, we are shown how one racially motivated incident can affect the lives of many. For Bethesda (Beth) Barnes, a college professor of English, life is good. Although she is one of the few African-American faculty on a college campus, she loves her job. Everything is going fine until four African-American sorority sisters are assaulted by some white male students. The women decide to take action and ask Beth to be their advisor. Even though Beth sees the fight as a losing battle, she agrees to take on the girls' cause. During the tumultuous months that follow, Beth discovers how ugly racism can be and the leaps and bounds you may have to jump to overcome it.

The characterization in this book was excellent. Although minor characters, Beth's family played a major part in helping us figure out what made her tick. The righteous cop sister, the Queen of De-Nial mother and the inquisitive niece help to add dimensions to the story. The same could be said about the students on campus, Beth's man friend, Lloyd and her best friend, Sherri.

This is the second book that I have read that focused on racism this year and it was interesting to see how they differed. This one presented us with a main character who was oblivious to the racial injustice that surrounded her. We were able to see how her naivete was chipped away after each incident. The setting of the college campus also seemed appropriate since they are so many different walks of life in one area.

Breaking Away was a good read and I would recommend it to my friends and family.

Reviewed by Nicole
APOOO BookClub

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Race Revelations, June 24, 2003
This review is from: Breaking Away (Hardcover)
This book had a greater impact on me than I expected. By the time I was done reading about the neo-Nazi attacks on tbe black sorority sisters and the racist threats aimed at the black professor who is the main character, I was angry and wondering whether I, like Beth Barnes, have been living a deluded life. It made me sad to think that the safe little world I live in -- where I eat out and spend recreational time with white people, thinking we all see each other as equals -- could possibly be a figment of my imaginiation. I was reminded of how many times I've encountered white colleagues outside of our usual settings only to become invisible to them. Many times it seems they barely speak and often act as if they don't recognize me. I'm reminded of how often at work I'm given a big assignment and then given one or two white folks to help me with it, while white co-workers are given the opportunity to succeed (of fail) totally on their own. Either way, at least they are trusted. Bottom line: The book made me think and reevaluate how I see my world. Any book that makes you do that is a good one. It's just sad to think that after my reevaluation, what I come up with is a picture of a world that hasn't made nearly as much progress in race relations as I thought prior to reading this book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars University Race Relations, June 28, 2008
By 
The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers (RAWSISTAZ.com and BlackBookReviews.net) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Breaking Away (Hardcover)
Bethesda (Beth) Barnes grew up in a household where she and her sister led a sheltered existence. Their parents never wanted them to know about the harsher realities of life for African Americans. They kept from their daughters the true state of race relations in America. As a result, Beth grew up looking at life through rose colored glasses, never seeing (or not paying attention to) the inequities and injustices Blacks faced at the hands of the racists views of some white Americans. Although she works at a prestigious university as a professor, it doesn't really faze her that her's is only one of a few faces of color on staff. She becomes complacent and tries to go along to get along. In any event, she loves her job, her students and the man in her life. Life couldn't be better.

Then the unthinkable happens. Beth gets approached by four African American female students about an incident that has rocked their world. While practicing for a Greek show on campus, the young ladies were humiliated and debased by a group of White male students. They were cursed, called racially insensitive names and had garbage thrown at them. They intend to pursue a lawsuit challenging the university's policy on harassment and want Beth to be their faculty advisor. Although not entirely sure about the merits of the case, Beth takes on the job and is immediately propelled into the chasm of racial injustice and just how far some are prepared to take it. This case and the near simultaneous loss of her father and sister will force Beth to take a long look at the way she was raised and the life she currently lives. Will she go along or break away?

In BREAKING AWAY, Kristin Lattany has written a thought-provoking, suspense-filled chronicle on race relations that could be representative of any university campus in America. Lattany writes in such a way it causes you to look within yourself and question your complacency as far as race. Have you been going along to get along, or have you stood up for your rights and those of others? Her characterizations are excellent and go a long way in providng insight and explanation as to motives. I was able to identify with many of the emotions emitted and the thought processes that were derived. Although this is my first read by this author, it was well worth the effort and I'm sure others will benefit from this insightful read.

Reviewed by Brenda Lisbon
of The RAWSISTAZ(tm) Reviewers
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