Raven leilani luster review6/30/2023 I chased them down the hall with a bottle of Listerine, saying, I can be a beach read, I can get rid of all these clauses, please, I’ll just revise.’Įdie starts dating white, married, suburban father-of-one Eric. I dove for their legs as they tried to leave my house. ‘“I’m an open book,” I say, thinking of all the men who have found it illegible. Key to Edie’s struggle is the desire to distil and define herself, to create and present a cohesive whole that will make her more desirable to society, and to men in particular, and her observations on her previous dating experiences are both painful and funny in the same breath: ‘We both graduated from the school of Twice as Good for Half as Much,’ she comments, ‘but I’m sure she still finds this an acceptable price of admission.’ Edie’s identity as a young millennial woman is inextricable from her identity as a woman of colour, and we feel the undercurrent of pernicious racism running through the novel, an intersection that exacerbates many of the things that are already difficult about millennial life in a poorly-paid publishing job in a global city. Edie is a Black woman in her early twenties living in New York, working in publishing where she has just one other Black female colleague. Buckle your seatbelts for a wry, painful, immersive, smart and introspective ride.
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