Born a Crime by Trevor Noah
Comedian and author Noah shares his personal journey from his birth in South Africa, where his conception was literally a crime since his father was white and his mother was black, to his job today behind a desk at "The Daily Show." Spending the first years of his life hidden away from others for fear the government might take him away because of his biracial heritage, Noah struggled to find his place in the world alongside his fearlessly determined mother who would stop at nothing to protect her son.
Review from Publishers Weekly Starred:
Having thoroughly mined his South African upbringing in his standup comedy and monologues on The Daily Show, Noah here tells the whole story in this witty and revealing autobiography. Born to a black African mother and a white Swedish father, Noah violated the Immorality Act of 1927, which outlawed interracial relationships. Though apartheid ended a decade after Noah’s birth, its legacy lived on in the country’s nigh-inescapable ghettos and perpetual racial conflicts, continuing to affect his life as he came of age. Noah’s story is the story of modern South Africa; though he enjoyed some privileges of the region’s slow Westernization, his formative years were shaped by poverty, injustice, and violence. Noah is quick with a disarming joke, and he skillfully integrates the parallel narratives via interstitial asides between chapters to explain the finer details of African culture and history for the uninformed. Perhaps the most harrowing tales are those of his abusive stepfather, which form the book’s final act (and which Noah cleverly foreshadows throughout earlier chapters), but equally prominent are the laugh-out-loud yarns about going to the prom, and the differences between “White Church” and “Black Church.”