![]() ![]() ![]() However, this is only in the original manuscript which some reviewers including McKinney received as an advanced readers copy. According to The New Yorker, “critics felt that Zhao’s slavery narrative had erased a specifically African-American experience, and they objected to a scene in which an apparently black slave girl dies in an apparently white character’s arms, in an act of self-sacrifice. ![]() ![]() McKinney was not the only person upset by Zhao’s novel. People responded to McKinney’s tweet saying they were immediately cancelling pre-orders of Zhao’s book. This is probably not the best pitch for a novel and I can see why McKinney was upset, but I was disappointed to see an author of color being torn down before her book was even published. Internalized racism and anti-blackness is a thing and I…no” (Twitter, 2019). The original blurb for Blood Heir read: “In a world where the princess is the monster, oppression is blind to skin color, and good and evil exist in shades of gray…” Author LL McKinney tweeted (after reading half of an advanced copy) “I don’t give a good god damn that this is an author of color. Ever since the delayed release of Blood Heir I have been following the novel’s rocky road to publication.įor those who haven’t heard, Blood Heir by Amélie Wen Zhao was called “this year’s most controversial YA novel” by Slate Magazine.įellow author LL McKinney of A Blade So Black blasted Zhao’s book on Twitter calling it “anti-black”. ![]()
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