I belong to too many communities. Sometimes it overwhelms me.
But I'm Black. I'm a writer. I write Young Adult fiction.
I connect myself to communities that feed each individual part of me. When I visit here, I can rejoice in celebrations of my peers or lament the industry issues that make writing while Black a challenge.
I wish I were coming to rejoice, today.
The kiddie lit community has been in an uproar the last few days. Over this:

Yup, you guessed it, it's a book cover. What you don't know by looking at this cover, is Liar is about a Black teen with short, natural hair so "nappy-headed" she's been mistaken for a boy. While the author's Australian publisher went with a more abstract way to depict the main character's compulsive lying, the US publisher, Bloomsbury, decided to...sell more books, so they put a white girl on the cover.
The community is outraged. But the outrage is also tempered with folks trying to find a way to punish Bloomsbury without punishing the author, who has made it
clear she did not support this cover.
Bloomsbury, for its part, has
said: "“The entire premise of this book is about a compulsive liar,” said Melanie Cecka, publishing director of Bloomsbury Children’s Books USA and Walker Books for Young Readers, who worked on Liar. “Of all the things you’re going to choose to believe of her, you’re going to choose to believe she was telling the truth about race?”
Too bad the author has already stated that mis-represents the book. The MC lies about a lot of things, but not her very essence as a bi-racial person.
Bottom line, it's a mess turning into a fiasco on top of a heaping pile of, they wrong for that!
It points to all that is wrong about the publishing industry's marketing system, which is little more than aiming directly at the low-hanging fruit and happily going along if the book happens to do well outside of that.
Black YA authors are still in the early and fragile stages of being represented outside of historical fiction and hood stories.
Note: We're starting to be represented outside of them but those two niches remain the easiest and best way for a Black author to succeed in Young adult fiction! The last thing we need is blatant self-fulfilling prophecy nonsense like this making folk think our books can't sell with our faces on them!
Why was it so hard for Bloomsbury to take this opportunity (100K first print run) to show that a book with a black face can sell across the races? Justine Larbalestier's previous books all feature MC's of color. Her fan base is used to this. It would not have shocked them to see a Black face on one of her books.
Instead, they retreated to a safe place (marketing wise) effectively smacking young readers of color in the face. A solid reminder to them that they're good enough to be featured in the story but no, thanks we need a little lightening up to market you, make you more palatable.
So let me get this straight...
Black books don't sell, unless they're by a white author with a white person on the cover.
I bet that comes as a huge shock to readers of books like
these.
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