Jan. 25th, 2009

[identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com
I read a few novels by acclaimed African-American writer Walter Dean Myers when I was a teenager, but except for The Young Landlords, in which a bunch of kids acquire a building and its uncooperative tenants, he was too much on the gritty realism side for my taste.

I was boggled when, a while back in a used bookshop in Pasadena, I discovered that he had written a YA fantasy novel! I snapped it up, but took a while to get around to reading it. I was afraid it would be yet another subpar work by an author writing outside of his comfort zone.

It turned out to be surprisingly good. Written in a simple yet elevated style, like a fluid translation of an ancient myth, it tells the story of Tarik, an African boy taken as a slave to medieval fantasy!Spain. After the young men and women are sold off, Tarik's entire family is murdered by the tyrant nicknamed El Muerte, and Tarik is left for dead.

But he's rescued by two old men, one African and one Spanish, who were themselves victims of El Muerte. They train him and give him several quests to find magical items that will help him with his goal of revenge and justice, and then set him to it... accompanied by the Spanish girl they also rescued but who was too angry to accept their emotional control training, a half-mad warrior named Stria.

Though the story is familiar from a thousand quest novels, the mythic style, the fast pace, the roots in African culture and legend, the destabilizing presence of Stria (who is not the hero but provides a bracingly flawed presence to contrast with the rather perfect Tarik, and also saves the conclusion from an overly neat wrap-up), and the fact that I could probably count on my right hand every YA fantasy novel published in America with a black male protagonist, combine to make this an excellent read. I'm only sorry I didn't find it when I was a teenager and the quest narrative was still exciting and new to me. But honestly, this is worth reading even you're thoroughly sick of quests.

I regret to note this, since it should not be unusual, but I was impressed that the cover is not whitewashed.

This novel is out of print. It would make a fantastic reprint for the Firebird line.

Click here to order it from Amazon: THE LEGEND OF TARIK
[identity profile] meganbmoore.livejournal.com

Hi, this year will be my first time to participate.  If anyone would like to make recommendations, I've made a recs request post with a bit about my tastes here at my LJ.
[identity profile] eccentricweft.livejournal.com
I was wondering if Jewish writers are considered authors of color in this comm? I've seen the phrase "people of color" used broadly to refer to everyone who isn't a white Protestant, and other situations where the intent is to refer more precisely to people of non-European ethnic & racial heritage rather than religious heritage.

I'm comfortable with either interpretation. I was just thinking last night about a book I could post about.

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