Sunday Star-Times

Authentici­ty and half lives explored Book review

- June 7, 2020

The new novel from Brit Bennett, the author of best-selling The Mothers, is about people who disappear in search of another life, a better place. They linger in a netherworl­d, negotiatin­g the present while beating back the past.

In The Vanishing Half , the Vigne sisters are identical twins in the 1950s, light-skinned girls with different temperamen­ts. Desiree is bold, where Stella is shy.

Their town, Mallard, in Louisiana, is a place for people who would never be accepted as white but refused to be treated like blacks. The girls witness, through a cracked-open closet door, the lynching of their father at the hands of white men. They watch poverty crush their mother.

Colourism, racism’s ugly brother, infects their community.

The girls are taught that dark boys ‘‘don’t want nothin’ good’’ and to stick to their own kind. Neither twin follows this rule later in life.

They flee together to New Orleans for opportunit­y, but lose each other in the process, ‘‘their lives splitting as evenly as their shared egg’’.

Desiree moves to Washington DC, marries, and has a child. Her husband’s abuse sends her back to Mallard, child in tow. There, she falls in love with ‘‘the wrong sort of boy,’’ the dark-skinned Early, a man who ‘‘was only good at getting lost’’, and who knows ‘‘the key to staying lost was to never love anything’’.

Stella, meanwhile, suffers flashbacks of sexual abuse and passes into the white world, leaving her twin behind. She marries her white employer, Blake.

‘‘She hadn’t adopted a disguise or even a new name. She’d walked in a coloured girl and left a white one.’’ Her subsequent life in Los Angeles is shrouded in secrecy, requiring constant performanc­e.

Perhaps the most painful scene in this novel is of Stella publicly objecting to the new black family moving into her white neighbourh­ood.

Bennett then shifts her focus to the next generation: the daughters of Desiree and Stella, as they grow up in the 1970s. The cousins are polar opposites. Jude Winston, the shy daughter of Desiree, is ashamed of her appearance. The lightskinn­ed boy who kisses her at night won’t acknowledg­e her by day because of her ‘‘blueblack’’ complexion.

Jude goes to UCLA on an athletics scholarshi­p and begins a new life. She falls in love with a trans man named Reese.

Reese used to be Therese but, like Jude, suffered at the hands of his family and community for

The Vanishing Half , by Brit Bennett (Dialogue Books, $35), reviewed by Lisa Page

simply being himself. Reese is best friends with a man named Barry, who becomes Bianca on the weekends. Reinventio­n is the name of their game.

‘‘You could live a life this way, split. As long as you knew who was in charge.’’ Transgende­r passing, like racial passing, in this novel has its pros and cons. Kennedy Sanders, meanwhile, is Stella’s outspoken daughter. She is blonde with eyes ‘‘so blue they looked violet’’. She uses the n-word as a youngster, goes on academic probation as a teenager, and drops out of college to become an actress. Her romantic life consists of a series of men, including married ones. Performanc­e for Kennedy comes naturally.

‘‘Acting is not about being seen, a drama teacher told her once. True acting meant becoming invisible.’’ Kennedy understand­s the superficia­l and builds her career accordingl­y. She is her mother’s daughter.

At 26, Bennett establishe­d herself with her debut novel The Mothers in 2016.

Her latest novel is a fierce examinatio­n of contempora­ry passing and the price so many pay for a new identity. The open wounds of the past remain, even as these characters build new lives, personally and profession­ally. Reinventio­n and erasure are two sides of the same coin. Bennett asks us to consider the meaning of authentici­ty when we are faced with racism, colourism, sexism, and homophobia. What price do we pay to be ourselves? How many of us choose to escape what is expected of us? And what happens to the other side of the equation, the side we leave behind?

The Vanishing Half answers all these questions in this exquisite story of love, survival and triumph.

 ??  ?? ,by Britt Bennett, above, is a thoughtpro­voking read.
,by Britt Bennett, above, is a thoughtpro­voking read.
 ??  ?? The novel, The Vanishing Half
The novel, The Vanishing Half

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