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What does it actually mean to write diverse characters, and who gets to do it? In this conversation, Terry sits down with Black romance author Rae Shawn to dig into one of the messiest, most necessary questions in contemporary fiction: when writers reach beyond their own experience, what separates authentic representation from tokenism, trend-chasing, or outright harm?
Rae writes contemporary Black romance rooted in real cities, real class dynamics, and real psychological complexity, and she brings that same grounded honesty to this conversation. She and Terry discuss the difference between wanting to include diverse characters and actually doing the work, why the sports romance genre's whitewashing of majority-Black leagues is such a tell, and how "just having a trans person in your book" isn't the same as having a trans character.
They also get into the industry-level problem: what it means when a white author lands a six-figure deal for a story about a marginalized community's experience while actual members of that community are still screaming into the void, and what indie publishing does and doesn't change about that dynamic.
Topics covered in this episode:
Find Rae Shawn:
Most Writers Are Fans is a Starlight King production. Audio/video editing by David Riverol.
By Terry BartleyWhat does it actually mean to write diverse characters, and who gets to do it? In this conversation, Terry sits down with Black romance author Rae Shawn to dig into one of the messiest, most necessary questions in contemporary fiction: when writers reach beyond their own experience, what separates authentic representation from tokenism, trend-chasing, or outright harm?
Rae writes contemporary Black romance rooted in real cities, real class dynamics, and real psychological complexity, and she brings that same grounded honesty to this conversation. She and Terry discuss the difference between wanting to include diverse characters and actually doing the work, why the sports romance genre's whitewashing of majority-Black leagues is such a tell, and how "just having a trans person in your book" isn't the same as having a trans character.
They also get into the industry-level problem: what it means when a white author lands a six-figure deal for a story about a marginalized community's experience while actual members of that community are still screaming into the void, and what indie publishing does and doesn't change about that dynamic.
Topics covered in this episode:
Find Rae Shawn:
Most Writers Are Fans is a Starlight King production. Audio/video editing by David Riverol.