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It's the Little Things: The Everyday Interactions That Get under the Skin of Blacks and Whites

It's the Little Things: The Everyday Interactions That Get under the Skin of Blacks and Whites

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Author: Lena Williams
Publisher: Harcourt
Category: Book

List Price: $30.00
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 60 reviews
Sales Rank: 501304

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.7 x 1.1

ISBN: 0151004072
Dewey Decimal Number: 305.800973
EAN: 9780151004072
ASIN: 0151004072

Publication Date: September 29, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
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Also Available In:

  • Paperback - It's the Little Things: Everyday Interactions That Anger, Annoy, and Divide the Races

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A black person is taken aback when a stranger uses his first name. - A white person fails to recognize a black colleague outside the office. - A black executive is followed around a department store and then can't get a taxi to stop for her. - A white person comments in amazement on how articulate an Ivy Leaque professional is-a black Harvard graduate. Despite the progress our country has made since the civil rights movement, we live in separate worlds. Although people of different races work together, go to school together, live in integrated neighborhoods, and have developed long lasting friendships, we're still undeniably divided. Why? Ignorance. In this fast, funny, smart and forthright book, New York Times reporter Lena Williams tells it like it is. Writing from her own experiences and from what she has learned through conducting focus groups of blacks and whites all over the country, Williams opens our eyes to the annoying things we do and explains what they mean and how to avoid them. If you've ever noticed these sights-and especially if you haven't- you'll find It's the Little Things an eye opener, a delight, and an important bridge between our separated cultures.



Customer Reviews:   Read 55 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars should have had a different title.   April 21, 2008
im white and i really wanted to look at race relations- an objective look. instead it was more personal than anything else- it even had rants in their from her relatives.
the book was not balanced in the slightest. at the end she admitted that and said she couldnt find any white people "willing to talk." which i think is a load of bs. if you couldnt find any white people with views than DONT GO WRITING A BOOK AND CALLING IT THE LITTLE THINGS THAT ANGER AND DIVIDE RACES- instead call it what it is- THE LITTLE THINGS THAT ANGER AND ANNOY BLACK PEOPLE.

and ps. writing this does not make me a racist. it makes me a person writing a BOOK REVIEW.



2 out of 5 stars Please.   April 3, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This woman had a chance to make me understand the things I might do to annoy or hurt black people. I was open to hearing an argument and was planning to keep it all in mind and change my ways should they be hurtful to someone.
This woman got my attention and this is what she used her platform to tell me: White people smell, especially their wet hair. Black people think that white people train their dogs to not like blacks,and only attend parties to suck up to someone higher on the social ladder. White people call blacks by ther first names to degrade them. Lady, whites are called by their first names too. It happens to me every day and I am as white as they come. Society is just losing their manners as a whole- it is happening to everyone.
She stated as fact that white people will use any chance they get to prove their superiority over blacks (really? I hadnt even thought of something so foolish- I am not thinking about blacks 24/7 and how I can show them up!)
She said there is a perception that black people are not as smart as whites (I have truly never heard that) and that black people get funky looks from whites when they eat lunch or gather or work at a nice place.. Lady, so do the rest of us. We all get funky looks. How do you know what they are thinking of you? If they are thinking anything at all about you, it is: Black people hate us. I hope this person doesnt hate me too.)

I learned that white people ask black people "who do you know?" at white parties, because there is no way they could be prestigious enough to be a true guest. Wrong, lady. White people ask each other that as well.

This is a book of this one woman's hurt and annoyances at white people (forgive the sp's, I am typing fast) and that is fine, she should be allowed to vent. But as someone else pointed out this book is billed as things the races, not one race, do to hurt each other, not "things whites are surely thinking in their heads, although I have no proof."

She lent one chapter to white's questions on blacks. One question was why do black people lighten their skin and eyes and straighten their hair? She didnt provide any research on that. She simply commented that it didnt mean they were trying to look white. I need to hear more of a psychological background on that, because I am not buying it.

Most of the comments in this book were provided by this woman's friends and family- her niece, nephew, brothers, a few colleagues. She mentions a few focus groups, but for the most part, these are the gripes of her and her friends/family. It was not well researched. I am giving it two stars, because it opened my eyes that black people will pretty much hate me, no matter what I do. Look black people. We dont think less of you. We know you are angry, we can feel it. We might be scared of you sometimes, because we think you hate us, but we do *not* hate you. I do not share the same outlook as my ancestors, as you surely dont share the outlook of OJ Simpson. We desparately want you to know that we really dont sit around thinking of ways to one up you, like this woman says. Trust me, we've got our own problems in our own lives. It is all how you look at it. I could sit there and assume every person who lays eyes on me is looking at me because I am ugly. Or I could change my way of thinking and think they are really looking at me because they think I am pretty.

All I have learned from this woman was that black people are still very, very angry at whites and there is nothing I can really do to fix it. If I even *look* at you, I am giving you a funky look because youre black. If I dont look at you, I am ignoring you because you are black. There is truly nothing I can do. Thanks Mrs Williams, for letting me know there is no hope. I will turn my attentions to something else.



4 out of 5 stars Has grown on me slowly   June 20, 2007
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Firstly, this is a well-written book. It reads easily without feeling as if it was written at a 4th-grade reading level. The first few chapters grabbed me, but gradually I found myself angry at what appeared to be an outright bashing of whites -- and there were certainly those moments. But, although the book wasn't as balanced as it should have been, nor dispersed its criticism fairly (instead of saving the white replies for one chapter in the back), the book does have its merits.

I read this book to get the black perspective and that's what I got. It may not always be fair or right, but it's there, and my eyes were opened.
It doesn't always matter whether someone is correct in their beliefs. Sometimes it just matters to know what those beliefs are.

Now, I would love to see a book that fills the void that this one left. If Lena Williams can voice her gripes towards some of her white peeves, then let's have one that evens the playing field by truly discussing the black counterparts instead of brushing by them aside in one token chapter. (These would be equivalent points in the manner of Ms. Williams: Black people talking and answering cell phones in the movies, walking in the street in front of cars like they own the concrete, mumbling derisive comments under breath when passed on the street, etc.)

In the meantime, I will continue to live out the lessons I've learned here. Instead of avoiding eye contact with people, I make a point now to gaze a split second longer to catch their glimpse and give a friendly nod. I go to the one black furniture salesman instead of the sea of white ones. I take a few extra seconds at the cash register to say something friendly in order to do what little I can to bridge the gap that someone else might have wedged in place. It's the little things that divide and the little things that can mend.



4 out of 5 stars On the other hand...   September 24, 2006
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I was sort of shocked to read all the negative reviews of this book. I read it recently and really liked it.

No, her defense of white people is not especially strident or lengthy. Why would it be? As a white woman reading the book, the information about african-american culture was the more interesting to me anyway. I already know that lots of white people don't like, for example, that if someone accuses you of racism and is proved wrong you never get an apology. I didn't know anything about white women's hair being an issue.

The information mostly is anecdotal, but conversations seem to be the best way to get it. I can't imagine that any sort of survey would get honest answers.

Anyhow, I learned a lot. I'm tempted to write her a note and say that I would be happy to participate in a focus group for a followup book.




3 out of 5 stars Largely anecdotal   September 10, 2006
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I did find out more about racial perceptions that are very rarely discussed. I thought there would be more rigorous research, but it is mainly a series of interracial (and interesting) conversations interlaced with the author's personal experiences, which are eye-opening.

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