Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
It's fine that you don't remember the book or that the topic didn't interest you. But you don't have to denigrate it as a "white woman thing." Think about what you are doing. Is anything that simply didn't cross your radar written off now as a petty bourgeois exercise in racism? Croatia? Must have been a white woman thing.
+1000
I’m almost 52, white, and hadn’t heard of her. Please stop dividing EVERYTHING up along racial lines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
It's fine that you don't remember the book or that the topic didn't interest you. But you don't have to denigrate it as a "white woman thing." Think about what you are doing. Is anything that simply didn't cross your radar written off now as a petty bourgeois exercise in racism? Croatia? Must have been a white woman thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
It's fine that you don't remember the book or that the topic didn't interest you. But you don't have to denigrate it as a "white woman thing." Think about what you are doing. Is anything that simply didn't cross your radar written off now as a petty bourgeois exercise in racism? Croatia? Must have been a white woman thing.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the PP who went to law school with her. To be clear, Elizabeth was never particularly interested in studying the law (she got a 152 or something like that on the LSAT) - but no one at my school doubted she was extremely talented. And she wasn’t a vanity hire - David Boies was a fan of hers, from what I heard. That said, she was never going to be a partner at BSF or any other big law firm. My classmates are all very sad, she was an incredibly charismatic and magnetic figure.
Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
Yep. Just you.
Are you black? Seriously? I do not remember this phenomena. I vaguely remember the book but I don’t remember it being such a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
Yep. Just you.
Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
Anonymous wrote:I’m the PP who went to law school with her. To be clear, Elizabeth was never particularly interested in studying the law (she got a 152 or something like that on the LSAT) - but no one at my school doubted she was extremely talented. And she wasn’t a vanity hire - David Boies was a fan of hers, from what I heard. That said, she was never going to be a partner at BSF or any other big law firm. My classmates are all very sad, she was an incredibly charismatic and magnetic figure.
Anonymous wrote:This must have been a white woman thing. I'm 50 and Black and I do not remember this book. Is it just me?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved her book. So sad. I had no idea she became a lawyer in a big law firm. What kind of law did she practice?
She wasn’t a lawyer. She just pretended to be one.
Anonymous wrote:It comes back and it comes back in new places in new forms. Even if you get the clear.
My mom had it, had a 6 year "all clear" got it again. Got it a 3rd time 2 years later.
Was cancer free, clinically for the next 17 years and now has it in other places.
There was never any doubt in our minds it would return, one way or another.