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    1. I had a conversation with another blogger recently about why it’s important to read books about non -white, straight, able-bodied characters without having the book be about that. She was concerned that labeling a race makes the book focus on race, but I argued that without labels, we’re all picturing the same run-of-the-mill white person. Also, minority communities express that they want books with characters that look like them without the book being something that, in the end, makes white people feel good inside, e.g. a story in which a slave escapes or people fight for their civil rights, something “moving.”

    2. Yes, many of the characters were described as having darker skin, but some characters weren’t described at all in terms of their skin colour, and I find I just assumed they were white, but I don’t know why, other than for the reason you just pointed out…

  1. I’ll be very happy when books stop being “about” race, gender and sexual orientation, and just include characters from those communities without feeling the need to focus on those aspects. There have been a few authors doing this in the UK recently. Lucie Whitehouse writes a series about an Asian British police officer (our biggest ethnic minority) in one of our most multi-cultural cities, and so far she hasn’t used race as the storyline – she’s just shown the society as it is. I find it refreshing!

  2. I haven’t seen this book around. It sounds like fun, and I love that it’s African-American without being about race. Maybe publishers are getting somewhere.

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