Posts tagged truelane Book Club
truelane Book Club: August 2020

As informative and overwhelming as it has been filling our brains with anti-racism nonfiction over the last three months, I’ve seen dozens of posts asking white and non-Black allies to read simply “normal” Black literature. This is a very straightforward, albeit small, way to normalize Black culture in our world of white supremacy. We don’t only want to read about the ways that Black people are oppressed and how to fight the system, but we can actually fight it by simply reading a regular novel about a Black person living their life. Naturally, I dove right into my favorite genre to start the search for a good read—coming-of-age debut young adult novels—where I found the powerful and heartbreaking gem that is Color Me In by Natasha Díaz for August’s truelane book club pick.

In a word, Díaz’s writing is enchanting. Nevaeh Levitz is a high school sophomore whose parents, a Jewish father and a Black mother, have recently split on definitively un-amicable terms. Nevaeh is white presenting, which means she has light skin and appears by a visual account to be a white person in most communities. This affords her a ton of privilege that she doesn’t understand, which her Black female cousins on her mother’s side are swift to point out when she moves to Harlem. No longer in the wealthy white neighborhood of her comfortable childhood, Díaz skillfully takes us through Nevaeh’s identity search for whether her Blackness can fit with her whiteness, and if she can find a way to be proud of both cultures.

When reading good fiction, you never need to question whether your protagonist is a real person or not—they are real enough on the page and their experiences affect you similarly. In Color Me In, it was clear right away that Díaz was drawing on personal experience throughout, and I was not surprised in the end acknowledgements to find it was autobiographical fiction. Unpacking the memories of a life you put away long ago couldn’t have been easy, and Díaz crafted the story beautifully.

Dancing with the electric colors of New York City on hot summer nights, dozens of dynamic characters from every walk of life, a magical first love that goes exactly the way you want it to and plenty of high school and social media drama, this is a novel that is full of spice and life while taking you to places of loss, heartbreak, and fear. The lows are low, but they teach you lessons along the way—including the importance of continuing to work towards closing our nation’s prolonged chapter on racial injustice.

Order Color Me In from Black-owned bookshop The Lit. Bar today:

truelane Book Club: October 2018

My 2018 mantra was this: “Read more, also hustle.” My little sister was even kind enough to embroider it on a wall hanging for me, and it has certainly helped me succeed. Being on a mission to read more has forced me to get serious about my Goodreads account and pay weekly visits to my local library, putting me in contact with thousands of new-to-me titles. It inspired me to share some of them with you all, and I decided to create the official truelane book club.

It’s a fun one because there are no rules. There are no time limits or deadlines. I select a “book of the month” off my reading list and share it on the #truelanebookclub hashtag, and I couldn’t believe that others shared too! Seeing everyone’s posts brought me so much joy and truly reminded me that social media is a community, not just an avenue for me to promote product. As an influencer, it’s easy to feel like you have blinders on because those promotions pay your bills. But I wouldn’t be able to pay my bills this way if it wasn’t for my stellar readers, so thank you for being readers & reading along with me!

The October book of the month was The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro. I love historical fiction and anything set in the art world, so I had high hopes for this novel. Thankfully, all of us participants loved it overall! Here are a few quotes from the #truelanebookclub crew:

“Loved it! Couldn’t put it down.” - @maburns103

“Loved the book. I didn’t see her as a forger at all. I liked how she prevailed in the end.” - @aliciakeiser

“I loved the plot of The Art Forger, but the writing wasn’t very exciting or descriptive. And it ended kind of abruptly. It took me a second to realize I had finished the book.” - @dresstothrive

“I've never read a book like this before. Although I'm only a few chapters in, I'm very much enthralled. It's excited to see what the protagonist will do with every opportunity given.” - @musicforghosts

(How nerdy am I that I’m so excited I got to use the quote feature on Squarespace? Very.)

I agree with @dresstothrive that the writing didn’t really capture me, which is a necessity if a book is going to become a favorite of mine. The protagonist of the book, Claire, is a painter and makes a living painting copies of famous works that are sold as reproductions—totally legal. However, she’s propositioned to create a forgery of one of the most famous works in recent history; a Degas that was stolen in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist of 1990, which is totally illegal. With every discovery that unfolds, it makes you question which characters are the true artists and which are the true forgers. I was satisfied with the ending, although it did feel sudden and rushed. Plus, I was so excited that it was set in Boston (one of my favorite cities!) so I loved the setting as well.

Feel free to leave comments here if you have any more thoughts on the book! Stay tuned on the #truelanebookclub hashtag for November’s title, and please feel free to send any of your favorite books my way.

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