Several BB's have been having an interesting discussion about many factors related to writing authentic characters of different ethnic and racial backgrounds. Within that conversation, several subtopics came up. I am starting this thread for anyone who'd like to contribute to resources that might help writers. Specifically, how to convey a character's ethnicity/racial background without resorting solely to skin color descriptions, books that might be of interest and websites or blogs that collect examples of books with diverse characters or main characters of color.
Here's the original thread:
http://www.verlakay.com/boards/index.php?topic=63378.0And a related thread:
http://www.verlakay.com/boards/index.php?topic=61484.0And another:
http://www.verlakay.com/boards/index.php?topic=61484.0Some things noted in the thread were Stacy Whitman's Pinterest
http://pinterest.com/stacylwhitman/For people looking for books with Asian MC, Pooja Makhijani keeps an annotated list on her blog:
http://www.poojamakhijani.com/sakidlit.html Lee and Low Books
http://www.leeandlow.com/The Brown Bookshelf: A blog highlighting children's books by African American writers
http://thebrownbookshelf.com/ The CBC Diversity Committee Blog: A blog "dedicated to increasing the diversity of voices and experiences contributing to children’s literature."
http://www.cbcdiversity.com/p/introduction.htmlI think it could be helpful to share examples of times that a writer conveyed something about a character's background not limited solely to skin color (though in a unique context, that works). The word that came up was "organic." A couple of examples were noted in the thread. Here's my very imprompu example.
I grabbed my copy of Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis. Obviously the cover gives a complete clue. In my re-reading, I didn't figure out until page 15 from the text that Buddy was African-American and it was because of what Mrs. Amos said to him, "I do not have time to put up with the foolishness of those members of our race who do not wish to be uplifted." That alone was not necessarily enough, but I had a couple of breadcrumbs that were dropped earlier that helped me connect the dots with that statement.
So jump in if you have ideas or resources on this topic. Thanks.