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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Cary, a black woman, recounts her challenging years as
student and teacher at an elite prep school. Author tour.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library
Journal
YA-- A streetwise kid from West Philly, Cary was the
first African-American female to attend St. Paul's, a prestigious New
England prep school. With tremendous drive, she set out to achieve
self-imposed academic, athletic, and social goals. Although she believed she
owed it to the school that accepted her on scholarship, to her family who
encouraged and sacrificed, and to those who will come after, she found that
the price was great. The emotional distance from her family widened with the
geographic separation, and their deep love and pride could not make up for
their blindness to her discomfort. While Cary achieved most of her aims,
thus justifying the experience to herself, perceptive readers will be pained
at her need to do so. Broader in scope than most coming-of-age memoirs, this
candid account is sure to strike a sympathetic chord.
-Jackie Gropman, Richard Byrd Library, Springfield, VA
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
In 1972, Cary left her black suburban Philadelphia
neighborhood to attend St. Paul's, an elite, formerly all-male prep school
in New Hampshire. In these memoirs she describes the tumultuous transitions
this new life engenders, as well as the inevitable racism over which she
triumphs. After graduating, she returns to St. Paul's as a teacher. Cary
tells her story well and with great description, but only at the book's end
does the reader understand what she gained and lost as a result of her
experience. Given her unique perspective, her narrative would have been much
more interesting had she concentrated more on her tenure as a teacher and
trustee, and how she responded to people as a result of her experience,
instead of relying so much on recounting her school days. For large
collections only.
- Danna C. Bell, Marymount Univ . Lib., Arlington, Va.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Book Description
In 1972 Lorene Cary, a bright, ambitious black teenager
from Philadelphia, was transplanted into the formerly all-white, all-male
environs of the elite St. Paul's School in New Hampshire, where she became a
scholarship student in a "boot camp" for future American leaders. Like any
good student, she was determined to succeed. But Cary was also determined to
succeed without selling out. This wonderfully frank and perceptive memoir
describes the perils and ambiguities of that double role, in which failing
calculus and winning a student election could both be interpreted as
betrayals of one's skin. Black Ice is also a universally recognizable
document of a woman's adolescence; it is, as Houston Baker says, "a journey
into selfhood that resonates with sober reflection, intelligent passion, and
joyous love."
Ingram
An African-American woman remembers her adolescence at
the formerly all-white, all-male St. Paul's School in New Hampshire, and
tells of the pains she endured in order to succeed without selling out.
Reprint. 25,000 first printing. Tour. NYT.
From the Publisher
"Probably the most beautifully-written and the most
moving African-American autobiographical narrative since Maya Angelou's
celebrated I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings."
--Arnold Rampersad
From the Back Cover
"A genuinely remarkable book that takes its place
alongside those by Richard Wright [and] Maya Angelou . . . by a writer of
singular grace, wit and self-knowledge . . . Black Ice is beautiful in all
respects, not merely as a contribution to that 'unruly conversation' among
black Americans but as a precious gift to all of us." --Washington Post Book
World
"Probably the most beautifully written and most moving African-American
autobiographical narrative since Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird
Sings." --Arnold Rampersad
"A stunning memoir . . . Subtly nuanced and unsparingly self-aware . . .
Black Ice is an extraordinarily honest, lively and appealing book." --The
New York Times Book Review
About the Author
Lorene Cary’s new novel Pride (Nan A. Talese/
Doubleday, 1998; Anchor 1999) is told in the voices of four friends–“subtle,
idiosyncratic characters...whose personalities seem utterly, and
affectingly, distinctive,” according to The New York Times Book Review .
It also praises the book’s ability to shift “between the staccato directness
of black slang and the more formal cadences of standard English....”
The Price of A Child has been selected as the first city-wide One
Book, One Philadelphia choice. The novel traces one woman’s escape
from slavery and brings alive Philadelphia’s Underground Railroad history. A
New York Times reviewer called the writer “a powerful
storyteller, frankly sensual, mortally funny, gifted with an ear for the
pounce [of] real speech,” and praised the novel as “a generous,
sardonic, full-blooded work of fiction.” (Knopf, 1995; Vintage 1996)
Cary’s first book, published by Knopf in 1991, was Black Ice , a
memoir of her years first as a black female student, and then teacher, at
St. Paul’s, an exclusive New England boarding school. Arnold Rampersad has
dubbed it “...probably the most beautifully written and moving
African-American autobiographical narrative since Maya Angelou’s celebrated
I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings .” Black Ice was chosen as a
Notable Book for 1992 by the American Library Association.
Lorene Cary was graduated from St. Paul’s School in 1974 and received
B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania in 1978. She won a
Thouron Fellowship for British-U.S. student exchange and studied at Sussex
University. She has received Doctorates in Humane Letters from Colby College
in Maine, Keene State College in New Hampshire, and Chestnut Hill College in
Philadelphia.
In 1998 Lorene Cary founded Art Sanctuary, a non-profit lecture and
performance series that brings black thinkers and artists to speak and
perform at the Church of the Advocate, a National Historic Landmark Building
in North Philadelphia.
Currently a lecturer in creative writing at the University of Pennsylvania,
where she was a 1998 recipient of the Provost’s Award for Distinguished
Teaching, Cary has lectured throughout the U.S. She began writing as an
apprentice at Time in 1980, then worked as an Associate Editor at
TV Guide , freelanced for such publications as Essence ,
American Visions , Mirabella , and The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sunday Magazine , and served as Contributing Editor for
Newsweek in 1993.
In 2002, Cary received the Women’s Way Agent of Change Award; in 2001 the
Advocate Community Development Corporation’s Award for Urban Excellence; in
2000, a Philadelphia Historical Society Founder’s Medal for History in
Culture; in 1999, the American Red Cross Spectrum Rising Star Award for
community service; and in 1995, a Pew Fellowship in the Arts Fellowship. She
serves on the usage Panel for The American Heritage Dictionary and
the Union Benevolent Association board. Cary is a member of PEN and the
Author’s Guild. She lives in Philadelphia with her husband, the Rev. Robert
C. Smith, and daughters Laura and Zoë.
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08/13/03