An It's Complicated! — Book Covers guest post by author Coe Booth.
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Coe Booth |
I really thought the photo of a teenage boy looking out onto his neighborhood would attract the attention of the audience I had in mind when I was writing the book — teenagers, especially boys, who don’t usually find a book that speaks to them. And I’ve since heard from lots of teens who tell me that it was the cover that initially drew them to the book.
The thing I never imagined was that the cover (and the covers of my subsequent books) might create an automatic ghettoization of my work.
The thing I never imagined was that the cover (and the covers of my subsequent books) might create an automatic ghettoization of my work.
I can’t tell you how many libraries I’ve been to where my books are not even shelved in the mainstream YA section. They are relegated to the shelf labeled “Street Lit” where the books about black people live. The same is true in some bookstores where a black person on a book cover means it’s no longer YA; it’s “Urban Fiction”.
I’m here to tell you, when it comes to books, segregation is alive and well in America.