Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2017 Challenge prompts
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A book by a person of color


I almost read that for my Oprah book this year! I will add it to the list! Thank you :)


I read it last year and I agree, very important book - although I was a bit put off by too many voices, I get where she was going with it.
I also can highly recommend Kindred, Between the World and Me, and if you want something short and sci-fi with an ethnic twist, Binti is super delicious and different.
Americanah was the one that had the biggest impact on my worldview.

I love this prompt, and there are SO MANY books I want to read that would fulfill it. I have no idea which book I'll eventually use to check this box. I've also got a personal goal to increase the percentage of non-white authors I read (I had hoped to get to 25% this year, but I'm only at a paltry 12% right now for 2016 ytd).
Some of my favorite authors of color: Zen Cho, Nnedi Okorafor, Walter Mosley, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Arundhati Roy ... that's just a few ... there are so many. There's also Amy Tan (admittedly not really my style), Colson Whitehead, Sabaa Tahir, Marie Lu, Junot Díaz, N.K. Jemisin, Louise Erdrich, Aziz Ansari, Mindy Kaling, and on and on and on ... (I'm leaving so many great authors out!)
Some of my favorite authors of color: Zen Cho, Nnedi Okorafor, Walter Mosley, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Arundhati Roy ... that's just a few ... there are so many. There's also Amy Tan (admittedly not really my style), Colson Whitehead, Sabaa Tahir, Marie Lu, Junot Díaz, N.K. Jemisin, Louise Erdrich, Aziz Ansari, Mindy Kaling, and on and on and on ... (I'm leaving so many great authors out!)

I loved Mindy's first book. And I actually really enjoyed Aziz's. A little more informative, a little less funny, but very interesting.


I've chosen that one as well and I am reserving Kindred because of the time travel for "set in two time periods"

I'm pretty excited to read Time Traveler: A Scientist's Personal Mission to Make Time Travel a Reality
I really enjoyed Born a Crime. I highly recommend it.

Juanita wrote: "Tried to download the Audible deal but they've closed it. "We've reached the maximum number of rewards." Bummer."
Hmm that's an interesting definition of "until the end of the year" - don't they realize this upsets more people than it pleases??
(That said, I tried to read that book this year, and I had to stop, it just felt so sexist. The casual and random anecdote about a dad who "accidentally"had sex with raped his daughter was really anger-inducing, and not in an empowering way. That was Chapter 2 so I don't consider it a spoiler. Maybe it would be better in audiobook?)
Hmm that's an interesting definition of "until the end of the year" - don't they realize this upsets more people than it pleases??
(That said, I tried to read that book this year, and I had to stop, it just felt so sexist. The casual and random anecdote about a dad who "accidentally"

But if you haven't read The Color Purple or I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, I would highly recommend them.

I got that message when I tried on my phone, but when I got home it worked on my laptop. Maybe it's just glitchy?
Thanks Nadine. I'll keep that in mind when I'm choosing when to listen.


If you are after a classic maybe something by Alexandre Dumas. I only found out he is Haitian decent (his grandmother was a slave).

Or Alexander Pushkin. His great-grandfather was from Africa and later a godson of Peter the Great (a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II is also his direct descendant).
(I feel that the term "person of color" is very American, or maybe Anglo-American. I don't think it's actually used in e.g. continental Europe, so it's a bit problematic for me.)
Tytti wrote: "... (I feel that the term "person of color" is very American, or maybe Anglo-American. I don't think it's actually used in e.g. continental Europe, so it's a bit problematic for me.) ..."
Yes, it's definitely an American term, and even here in the USA it seems some people aren't quite sure what it means! I think it's best translated as "someone who isn't white" and however you translate that will work. All of these categories are open to personal interpretation anyway.
Yes, it's definitely an American term, and even here in the USA it seems some people aren't quite sure what it means! I think it's best translated as "someone who isn't white" and however you translate that will work. All of these categories are open to personal interpretation anyway.


If you are after a classic maybe something by Alexandre Dumas. I only found out he is Haitian decent (his ..."
Have you read The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo? I'm going through it now, and it's a really great read!





I think the intent is to encourage us to be more intentional in reading a diverse group of authors. You are free to interpret it the way that makes most sense to you. Reading a book written by someone of a different nationality than you is still in the spirit of the challenge.

Caity wrote: "I have some really, really great options for this category. I've got the omnibus edition of N. K. Jemison's Inheritance trilogy, Octavia Butler's Lilith's Brood trilogy - Dawn, Adulthood Rights, an..."
you'll just have to read them ALLLLLL!!!! :-)
you'll just have to read them ALLLLLL!!!! :-)


I'd like to read Purple Hibiscus too. I heard part of it on BBC RAdio's book of the week and it sounded very good.

Yes, it's confusing! Maybe every country has its own definition for "people of color". In France we only use this expression for black people. (And it's pretty old-fashioned.) When I first saw in the 2017 reading lists that some people intended to read books by Asian authors for this prompt, I even had the feeling that they were "cheating"! ;-)


Oh, and then there's the "one-drop rule." Ugh.
I'm all for diversity, but digging into all the definitions is crazy-making.





Brown Girl, Brownstones so I'm going to go with that.
Books mentioned in this topic
Bad Feminist (other topics)Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body (other topics)
Ignite Me (other topics)
The Fire Next Time (other topics)
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Tahereh Mafi (other topics)Tahereh Mafi (other topics)
Héctor Tobar (other topics)
Marcus Samuelsson (other topics)
Victor LaValle (other topics)
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I like this prompt (and many others) because it will work for any genre. I read a lot of nonfiction and this will work for that. I read a lot of memoirs and this will work for that. I read a lot of Jhumpa Lahiri and this prompt will accommodate that. Do you see what I'm getting at here?
And another prompt on our wish list. Go us!