Site icon Dann Hurlbert

“…hawk-faced woman” from Parable of the Sower, by Octavia E. Butler

I’m a mix of Scandinavian, German, English, Irish, and South Dakotan:). Somehow my skin color turned out somewhere between peach, tan, and white, but I’m so much more than my skin color; so are you. I don’t want to be characterized by my skin color; neither do you. Yet those obsessed with race and skin color will do what Butler’s protagonist did: identify someone by their skin color first.

Butler’s following description tells us so much more. She was wiry and “all planes and angles.” That subsequent description is fantastic, and it tells us so much more about the human being. The character is malnourished, but with a strong and determined “hawk face.” Eventually we get to know these characters . . . but let’s start by looking deeper. As Morgan Freeman said, “I am going to stop calling you a white man and I’m going to ask you to stop calling me a black man.”

As authors, let’s stop describing our characters that way, too.

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