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For other authors named Judith Stone, see the disambiguation page.

6+ Works 178 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Judith Stone

Associated Works

The Penguin Book of Women's Humour (1996) — Contributor — 117 copies

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1950
Gender
female

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Reviews

The story of Sandra Laing, born to two white pro-aparthid parents in South Africa in the 1960s. A must read.
 
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coolmama | 1 other review | Mar 23, 2010 |
Sandra Laing was a dark skinned girl born to a white family. This would raise many questions and potentially cause minor problems in many nations through out the world. But the nation she was born in was not any country. It was 1950's South Africa. And her parents were Afrikaners, members of the National Party and residents of a rural town, sending their children to an ultra conservative white school near the border between Swaziland and South Africa. This tore the family apart, nearly ruined a woman's life and became the poster story for the flaws of the apartheid system.

Born with frizzy hair and darker skin, Sandra was always viewed as "coloured" by many in her neighborhood and school, though she says that she never noticed or realized this. This distinction in South Africa in the 1950's was an enourmous distinction, because even though she was born to white parents, she was of "appearance and general acceptance" coloured, which made her, legally a second class citizen. Her race was changed from white to coloured, and she was removed from her school, where she was tormented.

Her race was eventually changed back to white, but the damage was already done. She was clearly dramatized by her treatment. She was ostracized by her community, unjustly punished, threatened by her father, who seemed to love her, but never forgive her for her or her mother's potential transgressions (no one is ever 100% sure her father is her blood father), abandoned by her white family (though she was taken in by the black family of her first husband, and many men afterwards) and never seems to function as an adult. She doesn't trust people unless they give her money, she feels an endless amount of guilt for her past, and she never seems happy in her skin.

Overall, the book is an interesting story of one of the most famous victims of Apartheid. Judith Stone's voice is clear and concise. She supplements many hours of personal interviews with Sandra and her family and friends with news articles from her government file.

Although Judith's voice is clear, sadly, Sandra's voice is not, nor are the voices of many of the people she interviews. Many people have forgotton the past or, in the case of her white brothers, don't want to talk about their history. In the case of Sandra, she seems to have deliberately forgotton many things or simply doesn't want to talk about them, possiblely because they cause her pain. This leaves some holes in the story, and the book does suffer because of this. That said, it was a good effort by Stone to write this book as an outsider.
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getupkid10 | 1 other review | Jan 14, 2009 |
"Light Elements" was, for some years, a monthly feature in the popular-science magazine "Discover." Each month Judith Stone, a magazine feature writer rather than a scientist or science journalist per se, tackled a serious-but-offbeat scientific topic in a style reminiscent of a slightly-less-manic Dave Barry. At its best, when Stone used low-key humor to underline the glorious weirdness of nature, "Light Elements" could be informative and funny at the same time. A piece about the Army's attempts to develop a thorny hedge that would substitute for barbed wire is a masterpiece of deadpan humor. Another, about a "sidewalk astronomer" in Manhattan, is a jewel-like character study worthy of John McPhee. Even her lesser efforts (which relied on puns and hyperbole rather than irony) were fun to read.

This book is a collection of Stone's "Light Elements" columns, and it reads like one. The individual pieces are fine, but the transitions are nonexistent and (without a month between them), it's easy to overdose on her distinctive style. It's highly recommended for science fans, but you might want to save it for reading in the bathroom, the carpool line, the doctor's waiting room, or someplace else where you want a book you can read in 10 minute chunks.
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ABVR | Feb 12, 2008 |

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