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“To be clear, she always admired hard workers: she just didn't see the point of laboring to benefit someone else. "If you're going to work hard," she used to say, "you might as well work hard for yourself.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
“...she had little use for separate but so-called equal. My mother understood from her Southern roots a basic principle that still rings true; where there's a white presence, there will be amenities. She wanted grocery stores with quality produce, and roads that got repaired and streeetlights that came on magically at dusk and garbage that got collectd on time.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
“My mother's message to black and white folks alike was clear: It's nobody's business what I do for my children, nor how I manage to do it.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
“My parents’ marriage, begun with a pregnancy that produced a stillborn child, was itself stillborn—a union formed with expectation and promise that never delivered.”
Bridgett M. Davis, Shifting Through Neutral: A Novel
“That was my mother's policy: Feel free, feel welcome. Be happy.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
“The word secret is so loaded, suggests its country cousin shame; but I wasn't ashamed of anything because our family secret wasn't dark and my mother acted neither apologetic nor embarrassed.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
“The FHA adopted a racial policy that could well have been culled from the Nuremberg laws,” Charles Abrams, the urban studies expert, wrote in 1955, the year my parents arrived in Michigan from Tennessee.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
“Angie thought God deserved prettier stationary.”
Bridgett M. Davis, Into the Go-Slow
“She also loved beautiful things, and seems to have embraced early a philosophy penned by the writer Toni Cade Bambara: "Beauty is care, just as ugly is carelessness.”
Bridgett M. Davis, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers
tags: beauty
“Court ended up deciding who won the election. Can you imagine that shit happening in the US? Judges deciding who gets to be president?”
Bridgett M. Davis, Into the Go-Slow

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The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers The World According to Fannie Davis
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Into the Go-Slow Into the Go-Slow
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Shifting Through Neutral Shifting Through Neutral
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Black Summers: Growing Up in the Urban Outdoors (Made in Michigan Writer Series) Black Summers
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