Tales from the Internet! Starring: Bloomsbury! Featuring: White Washing Adventures!

This entry may require you to, like me, chomp on a rag so you don’t chew your own tongue off in a rage!

The other day I posted about wanting to read Liar by Justine Larbalestier because I like unreliable narrators and to be on top of possible brouhaha in the YA sphere because it seemed odd that a book with a character that was black had a cover with a girl who has white features (I’m not speaking to the model’s ethnicity). Larbalestier finally weighed in on the issue and I am kind of heartbroken and want to buy all her books so she will have the money to buy comforting chocolate, or perhaps a punching bag (I would choose the punching bag, but I have rage issues and she might not). Now here’s where I get torn. Do I buy the book to support a classy author whose work I enjoy, whose publishers have made a racist marketing decision or not buy the book because of that decision? I don’t care how nice they are, I don’t care if they rescue puppies and bring lunches to senior citizens, this decision was skeevy. It’s tough, though. I don’t want to support behavior like this, or this publisher to think it’s okay and point to their sale numbers to prove they’re right, but I do want to financially support authors writing about non-white characters. Maybe I could just buy the Australian version.

Publishers Weekly has an article about it, and this part got me:

And yet, some readers—and Liar’s editor—are defending the cover, noting that Micah, the unreliable narrator, could have fibbed about her own appearance. “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?” …. “Clearly, our striving for ambiguity with this cover, and for it to be interpreted as a ‘lie’ itself didn’t work for everyone. But again, if this jacket proves a catalyst for a bigger discussion about how the industry is dealing with its books on race, that’s a very large good to come of this current whirlwind.”

Please! Give me more of your delicious excuses as to why this decision wasn’t filled with gross, slimy stuff covering the underside of a racist publishing system. I am all ears! Man, it is totally fine if feelings were hurt, or non-white people felt badly, or white allies felt angry, or the author was disappointed and let down. It’s all okay because it was a learning experience! People will learn and that makes all the bad feelings all right! Except…not the people who need to, apparently. What have you learned, Bloomsbury? Clearly nothing, because instead of reading “we’re sorry for pretending that this book cover exists in a vacuum of perfect happy fun times race relations” I just read “it didn’t work for everyone”. Hell yeah! Pass the buck to the angry, disappointed people. It didn’t work because we didn’t get your ~~*amazing vision*~~.

To quote KJ who I frothed about this with in IM:

“Would they ever, in a million years, have put someone non-white on the cover when the main character describes themselves as white, unreliable narrator or no?”

Here’s a hint: if the author says, “you’re doing it wrong!” then you know, you’re probably are doing it wrong. It’s a wild theory but I think it has teeth. Bloomsbury is acting like we’re in some post-racial America where this decision doesn’t come with a ton of baggage even beyond erasing the Other; I also wonder how many nonwhite people were involved in making it. Way to go, Bloomsbury. Way to go.

sad kitten

This post was originally made at Dreamwidth. You can read comments and reply there with Open ID or comment below.

10 comments

Catherine said:

When I was reading about this, and noted someone commenting that the author hadn’t spoken up about it on her blog, I suspected that it was because she didn’t want to really want to rock the boat if it was just her. Glad to see that I was right on that case.

On the note of the book itself, I’ve put my name down to be notified when the Australian variant of Liar comes into stock on BookDepo. Sounds like a fantastic book, and I would never have heard about it if it weren’t for this controversy. And in the meantime, it’s off to order Magic or Madness right now. :)

posted on July 24th, 2009
susan said:

Thanks Renay,

Thanks for speaking out. I have openly asked where is the outrage among YA bloggers. Why am I not surprised you said something? :-)

Susan

posted on July 24th, 2009
Vasilly said:

I am so hurt and pissed off about this, I don’t think I can coherently post my feelings right now. It’s obvious that Bloomsbury doesn’t care what people feel about their decision. Since it sounds like I look a lot like the protagonist in the story (short hair, brown skin,) that according to Bloomsbury no one will buy a book that has me on the cover. I do think it’s funny that BloomsburyUSA has been awfully quiet on Twitter since this shit hit.

Thanks for writing about it, Renay.

posted on July 24th, 2009
Care said:

Would it be terribly difficult to buy the Australian version? I, too, like the Australia cover.

posted on July 24th, 2009

Well-said. Thank you for writing about this. I personally don’t feel that the Australian version is good enough at this point. I want a copy with a black girl on the cover. I want to see what should have been on the American version in the first place.

~Tashi

posted on July 24th, 2009
susan said:

Vasilly,

Oh, join me then, gurlfriend. I have been blabbering, incoherent, grammatical error riddled posts for two days . :-)

posted on July 24th, 2009

[...] journal July 24th, 2009 re: Liar, Bloomsbury and charges of racism posted in oops! an opinion! Following up on this post: [...]

posted on July 24th, 2009
Renay said:

@Catherine Yeah, I think I am going to get the Australian cover, too.

@Susan You know me, always looking for a fight. ;)

@Vasilly I took a few days, too, to think about it before I wrote anything down. I would like to read anything you have to say, though!

@Care That’s my plan! BookDepo all the way!

@Tashi I am hopeful for the paperback at this point, but I’m really torn over it. If we refuse both versions, the author gets hurt over a publishers decision. I feel that the Australian cover is a good compromise until we can get the paperback. It’s not perfect, but perfect would’ve been your suggestion, that the cover have the correct model, or the author’s that the cover feature no model whatsoever. Sigh!

posted on July 25th, 2009
Tarie said:

The author won’t get hurt financially if we buy the Australian edition! Let’s buy the Australian edition. :D

posted on July 26th, 2009

Bloomsbury thought they could get away with it b/c other publishes have in the past…hopefully this blogosphere outrage will set them straight on that point, but people do have to speak out and make it known that this kind of b.s. is NOT ok! Thanks for being an ally.

posted on August 2nd, 2009