| Passing
Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception across the
Color Line
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by
Martha A. Sandweiss
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The (February 5, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1594202001
ISBN-13: 978-1594202001
Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
Reviewed by
Thumper
Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception
across the Color Line written by Martha A. Sandweiss is a book
about an episode in America’s history that is hardly explored
anymore, passing. Usually passing is a term used when a black
person, who has a light color skin complexion is mistakenly
identified as a white person. In Passing Strange there is a
twist, I call it “reverse passing”. Passing Strange is a true
story of how a well respected white man, with some social
standing, lead a double life as a black man in order to love and
marry a black woman in the late 1800s. The story itself is
highly intriguing. Passing Strange one significant failure is
that Sandweiss in an effort to factually verify the story forgot
to tell the story.
Clarence King was a notable figure in American society in the
mid to late 1800. King was an explorer, geologist who
contributed to the mapping of the American West. He was a
popular writer and lecturer who was extremely well liked, a
sought after guest for any high class social occasion. Alas,
King had a huge secret. He was living a double life. On one hand
he was a man-about-town, on the other he was James Todd, a black
man who worked as a steel worker and a Pullman porter. Todd was
married to Ada Copeland Todd, a black woman with whom he had
three children. Clarence King managed to keep his life as James
Todd a secret until Clarence King/James Todd died and everything
came to a head.
I liked Passing Strange, but I did not love it. I was captivated
when I read the book summary online. I had read a number of
novels that featured black characters passing as white, but a
white man passing as black…without using makeup…and it being a
true story too? I HAD to read this book. The book has some fine
features. Eventually, I was left with a blah feeling after
reading it.
Despite Sandweiss exhaustive research, there was a human element
missing, a piece of a puzzle, that prevented me from connecting
or empathizing with Clarence King. If Passing Strange had been a
novel, I would have said that the character Clarence King was
not fully developed. Mainly, I missed knowing Clarence King
motivation for becoming James Todd: when did he come up with the
scheme; did he believe he had pulled off the deception; did he
ever think what would happen to him if his double life was
exposed? Because King did not leave a diary/journal or Sandweiss
did not find one; I do not know King’s motivation, but I would
love to find out.
In all fairness, Sandweiss realized that there were holes in
King’s story and there were no way to fill due to the lack of
documents needed to verify King’s thoughts or movement. This
lack of verified proof was more obvious when Sandweiss turned
the spotlight on Ada Todd, Clarence King’s wife. While the story
is good, the absence of this information hinders the book. I
believe the story would have been better if it was given an
historical fiction treatment; thereby, allowing Sandweiss to
pack in the spaces the research was unable to do.
Passing Strange, as it stands now, is an OK book. The book has a
tendency of becoming dry in a few places due to Sandweiss
relaying facts upon facts as one would compose a shopping list.
If Sandweiss had concentrated more on the storytelling aspect
rather than the bare bones verified facts of the story, Passing
Strange could have been a marvelous book.
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