Debra Stone, The House on Rondo

 There is nothing that is new in The house on Rondo because it’s happening around us all the time. Black neighborhoods are being gentrified, they’re being destroyed, in the name of progress again. And who loses out …?

Debra Stone

When thirteen-year-old Zenobia has to leave her friends and spend the summer at Grandma’s while Mama recovers from a stroke, life seems so unfair. But then the eviction letters start arriving throughout her grandparents’ neighborhood, and white men chalk arrows to mark the gas and water lines, and a new world of unfairness unfolds before her. It’s 1963, and Zenobia’s grandparents’ house on Rondo Avenue in Saint Paul — like all the homes in this thriving Black community — is targeted for demolition to make way for the new Interstate Highway 94.

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Episode 99 – Debra Stone, The House on Rondo

In Episode #99 Lissa talks with Author Debra J Stone about her new middle grade novel, The House on Rondo (University of Minnesota Press). Rooted in the lived histories of Minnesota’s Black communities, The House on Rondo offers a deeply personal window into the destruction of a thriving neighborhood through the eyes of a young Black girl coming of age during an era of national civil rights protests.

In Episode #99 Lissa talks with Author Debra J Stone about her new middle grade novel, The House on Rondo (University of Minnesota Press).

Rooted in the lived histories of Minnesota’s Black communities, The House on Rondo offers a deeply personal window into the destruction of a thriving neighborhood through the eyes of a young Black girl coming of age during an era of national civil rights protests. As Zenobia joins forces with her neighbor, the unforgettable former cowgirl Mrs. Ruby Pearl, to fight against the  demolition of her grandparents’ home to make way for the new interstate highway, readers witness not just the heartbreak of displacement but also the power of community, protest, and memory.

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Rondo was not the only Black neighborhood devastated by freeway construction. Learn How Interstate Highways Gutted Communities—and Reinforced Segregation in this article by Farrel Evans

Aerial view of an expansive interstate highway interchange, showcasing multiple overpasses and roadways weaving through a neighborhood, with houses visible in the surrounding area.

Lissa and Debra talk about the Selby Jazz Festival, an annual event in St. Paul, MN near Rondo. Learn more.

Lissa and Debra talk about the Rondo Commemorative Plaza (RCP). Learn more.

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ENJOY!

Our production team for this episode includes co-producers Lissa Jones and Edie French, technical director Paul Auguston, the voice Yo Derek, and our artist of inspiration Ta-coumba T. Aiken. Black Market Reads is produced by The Givens Foundation for African American Literature in partnership with iDream.tv.

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