White Mother, Black Child
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Ali Rock
This title uses virtual voice narration
WHITE MOTHER, BLACK CHILD
Evelyn Carter was born into a world where money solves problems and silence protects reputation. A world where futures are arranged, marriages are strategic, and mistakes are buried quietly.
Until she makes one.
A single night with a brilliant Black man at Princeton becomes a pregnancy that exposes everything her family claims to believe.
They give her a choice.
Erase the child.
Keep the money.
Keep the name.
Or keep her baby—and lose everything.
Evelyn chooses love.
She walks away from old money, old privilege, and a bloodline that values image over humanity. With nothing but stubborn resolve, she raises her daughter in a cramped apartment, teaching her numbers before fairy tales and ownership before apologies.
That daughter, Aaliyah, grows up different.
Not loud.
Not flashy.
Not chasing approval.
She learns early that wealth isn’t about looking rich.
It’s about control.
Guided by a quiet Black father who teaches her pride and financial literacy, and a mother who never stops believing, Aaliyah begins building long before anyone is watching.
From library Saturdays.
To late-night coding.
To underground hustles that turn into legitimate enterprises.
Until the girl nobody invested in becomes the woman nobody can ignore.
A self-made billionaire.
But money doesn’t heal everything.
It doesn’t erase being disowned by white grandparents who only reach out once power is attached to her name.
It doesn’t erase navigating identity in a world obsessed with boxes.
It doesn’t erase the cost of becoming exceptional.
White Mother, Black Child is a sweeping generational epic about sacrifice, forbidden love, Black fatherhood, and the quiet revolution of building wealth where none was supposed to exist.
This is not a story about getting rich.
It’s a story about rewriting destiny.
About how one woman’s decision to choose love over comfort creates a lineage that outgrows hate, outgrows limitation, and outlives memory.
Some families inherit legacies.
Others build them.
This one did both.