![]() ![]() “What Baldwin taught me,” she notes, “and what made me a writer” was “how to pay attention.” McLarin first came to think of herself “as a Black woman, first and foremost,” at Phillips Exeter Academy. They showed me other possibilities for living, even if all of those possibilities belonged to white people.” Baldwin proved to be a revelation about possibilities for Black lives, particularly his novel Another Country, which she cites as inspiration. ![]() ![]() Growing up, she felt like an outsider and found books to be “not so much an escape-there was no escape-as an expansion. McLarin expands on her previous essay collection, Womanish, to once again offer cogent insights about identity, racism, sex and sexuality, family and education, reading and writing, and the “Black, Pentecostal, one-parent, southern existence” from which she emerged. In the latest installment of the Bookmarked series, a novelist and essayist offers personal essays examining themes of gender and race. ![]()
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