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'It Always Starts With People': The Root Presents: It's Lit! Revisits Such a Fun Age With Kiley Reid

The writer's debut novel was an instant New York Times bestseller and longlisted for the 2020 Booker Prize.

โ€œPeople always say, โ€˜What made you want to write about race?โ€™โ€ says writer Kiley Reid. โ€œI personally feel like you cannot theme your way into a plot. It has to be the other way around.โ€

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Reidโ€™s first novel, Such a Fun Age was an instant New York Times bestseller when it debuted at the top of 2020; now available in paperback, the story has been optioned for development by Lena Waitheโ€™s Hillman Grad Productions. Intertwining conflicts of class, race and privilege, its narrative, focused on the experiences of a young millennial Black babysitter employed by a well-off white family while also navigating her first interracial relationship, preempted the racial reckoning that would drive home many of its themes. But as Reid tells us during this weekโ€™s episode of The Root Presents: Itโ€™s Lit!, โ€œFor me, it always starts with people. Itโ€™s the people who really, really get me hooked into something.โ€ ย 

For some, Reidโ€™s nuanced portrayals and loaded dynamics might naturally garner comparisons to another fictional bestseller-turned-film centering the class conflicts of childcare-based domestic work, 2002's The Nanny Diaries. Nevertheless, the timing of her debut and its added layer of how race further complicates those intimate dynamics coincided with a watershed moment in the ongoing movement for Black lives. As a result, despite being fiction, Such a Fun Age was among several books readers turned to en masse as they sought deeper insight into race relations in America. Reidโ€™s response to that phenomenon is as thoughtful and layered as her writing.

Image: Penguin Random House

โ€œYou know, so many Black authors and artists had to contend with the fact thatโ€”last year and still this yearโ€”that what brings people to their art are horrendous murders,โ€ she says. โ€œAnd as an artist, I feel you do not get to choose how people come to your art. And I donโ€™t think you should be picky about that, either. And I think itโ€™s a very human emotion to say, โ€˜Iโ€™m panicking, what do I do? Let me read a book.โ€™ Thatโ€™s beautiful.

โ€œAt the same time, Black authors such as myself have to contend with the fact that your book is playing a role in what is a lie that is presented, that consumption can just cure racism. And thatโ€™s just not true; you cannot consume your way out of a racist environment and system. And so itโ€™s difficult to sometimes see your book as a balm for people, especially when you didnโ€™t create it to tell white people something or teach them something,โ€ she continues. โ€œ[I]magine going to a museum and looking at a picture and being like, โ€˜Make me good...teach me how to be.โ€™ Thatโ€™s not how you enjoy art. And so I think that a lot of Black authors are contending with the fact that people arenโ€™t enjoying their art the way that they once thought they would.โ€

Hear more from the insightful Kiley Reid in Episode 40 of The Root Presents: Itโ€™s Lit!: Kiley Reid Takes Us Through โ€˜Such a Fun Ageโ€™, available on Apple, Spotify, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, Google Podcasts, Amazon, NPR One, TuneIn, and Radio Public.

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