The Vanishing Half By Brit Bennett

1088 Words3 Pages

Have you ever wondered what someone might go through in their everyday life? In Brit Bennett’s novel The Vanishing Half, readers explore all the hurdles characters experience through events such as someone escaping their town, figuring out their true ethnic background, and the family breakthroughs the characters all have. In this book, readers dive deeply into what it takes for someone to live the life they want. From the Vignes’ twins escaping their homes, calling Mallard to go beyond the city, to now twin Stella living lavishly while Desiree takes care of their mother, but at what cost? Jude, Desiree’s daughter, fights off racial discrimination while in college, and Kennedy, Stella’s daughter, faces struggles through finding her true self in the life her mother carved out for her. Bennett’s Vanishing Half develops a series of themes …show more content…

At the age of 16, the twins in The Vanishing Half were desperate to break free from the cycle that had kept them stuck in Mallard. A group of furious men dragged the twins' father, Leon Vignes, out of his own home and lynched him while the twins watched. Their father's death played a role in their early lives as they sought to escape the racism that their father had experienced. Desiree even questioned Stella about whether she wanted to "be cleanin' after the Duponts forever," even though the twins were working for a wealthy family and cleaning their home rather than pursuing an education (Bennett, p. 16). Stella realized that this was not the life she desired. Though the twins left their village together after Founder's Day, only Stella was able to live the life she desired. Stella left Desiree in Louisiana and went about her life at her own speed, making the decision to pass as white. Stella's character abandons her life in Mallard and fully changes her identity to become a "white"

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