Discrimination In James Mcbride's The Color Of Water

Words: 381
Pages: 2

James McBride’s memoir The Color of Water shows the McBride family and their struggles dealing with discrimination. You soon realize that James doesn’t live an ordinary life. With a step-father, eleven siblings, and a strong mother, you walk through James’s childhood and get a better understanding of both Ruth and James.
James’s biological father, Andrew McBride died while Ruth was still pregnant with James. Ruth remarried and James and her other children regarded their new strong and good-natured step-father as their father, calling him daddy. James and Hunter were very close, going on family road trips down South with Hunter’s brothers, Walter and Henry. But everything changes when Henry ends up having a stroke during James’s adolescence,