Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2017 Read Harder Challenge
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Task #17: Read a classic by an author of color
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Kirsten
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Feb 04, 2017 10:40AM

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Kirsten, BookRiot's goal was to expand the view of "classics" to get beyond the predominance of white folk, which influences readers' classification of what is and isn't a classic. Here's a link to the task description.
https://bookriot.com/2017/01/10/read-...
From the standpoint of how they defined the task, the identity of the reader was not defined. I'm not really a color-within-the-lines kind of reader, but am a fan of each reader determining for herself or himself what works meet each task. I tend to defend others' choices, though, when they are challenged, when it's admittedly none of my danged business. :)
Your thoughts?



I asked simply because I'm going to read Life and Fate anyway, but it's almost 1000 pages long and will take me a while to read, so I was hoping it would fit into one of this year's challenges so I wouldn't be behind schedule. This was the only challenge I could see it fitting, but I didn't know if Jewish people were considered People of Color or not.
Thanks for your replies -- I'll read a different book for this challenge!

I never could figure that out. How Hitler and some Nazis thought it was ethnicity and even if they converted Christianity they were still Jews... But then he was just warped.
I recently read that took place in the Tsarist pogroms and it was just disgusting the things they believed about the Jews.

True indeed. My grandmother had parents, 13 brothers and sisters and 7 sisters/brothers in law and only she and one sister and one brother survived the pogroms.

Several Jewish friends of mine on this platform place themselves and fellow Jews in that category -- as a positive identification, e.g., they identify with voices often marginalized and viewpoints frequently discounted by majority white cultures. The 500 Great Books by Women group here has a few threads with personal challenges to read women of color and the discussion on this point has been enlightening, positive and respectful. The general consensus is, who are we to dictate to a Jewish reader or author that he or she is not a person of color, if that's who he/she identifies?

I will exit this, I find the designation offensive not because its is a bad thing to be a POC, but because it follows the Nazi narrative that Jews are non-European. If your freinds are comfortable with that it is their choice, but they might want to do some research.

Calling them PoC does feel the way Bonnie said it to me as (sadly) when they were equated it was to show that they were "less than".
Everyone agrees, it seems, that Kindred counts in this category, but what about Dawn? I know it's written almost a decade later (1987), but it is definitely a classic in the speculative fiction community. What do y'all think?

I would count just about anything from Octavia Butler!


That's just so cold of you. :)

That's just so cold of you. :)"
LOL, it does hurt to think I was not just alive but IN LAW SCHOOL at that time. I need to go grab my cardigan and my Metamucil.

That's just so cold of you. :)"
LOL, it does hurt to think..."
I've got your AARP flyers over here on the table if you want to leaf through them this evening whilst sipping chamomile tea and knitting. I suspect we're a similar vintage.

That's just so cold of you. :)"
LOL, it doe..."
Let me throw on a pair of yoga pants and I will run right over.


I know nothing of queer vampyr speculative fiction (or straight vampyr speculative fiction for that matter) so I have no opinion, but it sounds like it ifills the bill based on your description.
Bonnie wrote: "LOL, it does hurt to think I was not just alive but IN LAW SCHOOL at that time."
Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of law school my partner was in 8th grade and THAT always makes me feel sufficiently ancient.
Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of law school my partner was in 8th grade and THAT always makes me feel sufficiently ancient.

Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of law school my partner was in 8th gr..."
I recently realized that my younger brother literally doesn't remember 9/11. We talked about trauma literature and I mentioned 9/11 in a "well, that changed everyones life, we all remember where we were when those planes hit those towers". And he looked at me with a blank stare and said "no, I was 4 years old. I don't remeber." And he is a (kind of) grown up! I meen - he can drive, vote, buy alcohol at bars.
There are grown up people out there who doesn't remember 9/11! That made me feel SO old!
Well, he makes me feel old often. He is my mother's child with another father and therefore is somewhat younger than the rest of us. He don't recall what the floppy disc is (well, theoretically he does - we have explained it - but he has never used one) and he doesn't even remember the Nokia 3310 phone!
Kids!

Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of law school my partne..."
I already feel old when I wake up every morning - my bones & joints play a symphony for me daily - so this thread didn't help. Thanks, folks! And for the record, I am still several years away from my AARP card, but last night I had chamomile tea while wearing yoga pants and doing a crossword puzzle. ;-)

Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of la..."
oh, man, your last evening apparel and activity sounds perfectly perfect.

Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of law school my partner was in 8th gr..."
LOL, you cradle robber you!

Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of law school my partne..."
That is staggering! But my son (who turned 18 yesterday) has no memory either, and he can now vote as well.

Ha! I wasn't very old in 1987 but when I was in my first year of la..."
LOL, some people just grow up (old) faster :)

I find it really interesting that people are trying hard not to be identified as POV and others are. When I found out that there were professional associations calling themselves ... of colour, I found it really sad and awful that people were calling themselves that. I don't identify as white - I find it offensive. It is very strange. I am part of a marginalised population though - disabled and have a chronic condition. But that is not how I identify myself.
What is a classic is also interesting. I guess it is something that has had an impact at the time or later and still has impact and is still being read. My choice might not fall into that category then LOL. Must look for another!

I find it really interesting that people are trying hard not to be identified as ..."
It might be an instant classic! It's up to you.


I loved The Count of Monte Cristo, but I had no idea Dumas was a POC. Your comment led me to read a bit more about his life and my goodness! So intriguing. I need to find a biography of this man. The Read Harder Challenge expands my horizons yet again.

Definitely! Any of Wilson's plays belong in this category.

Definitely! Any of Wilson's plays belong in this category."
Terrific! Thanks

I've been intrigued by a biography of Dumas's father: The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo. (It was recommended to me by friends, and I nearly read it for last year's challenge.)

Sounds fascinating. Thanks for the heads up.

Oh, yes, thanks for the heads up!




Scarily appropriate for this scary Trump time."
I have never read any Octavia Butler, but your comment made me want to read Parable of the Sower. Thanks!



Yes. Anything by Ishmael Reed would qualify.

I just finished Kindred. I hadn't realized it would fit a challenge task—it was just one of those books I'd been meaning to read for years! So glad I finally got around to it. What a powerful book.

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