Last year, I did two posts that explored diverse YA book covers. I wanted to see those covers featuring people of color prominently and obviously. After paying attention for those posts, it’s a thing I’ve kept an eye on as more 2016 YA book covers have been revealed. I’ve collected the covers fitting “diverse” in that they feature people who aren’t white in a way that makes it obvious they are not white.
All of the 2016 YA book covers haven’t yet been revealed yet, and there’s always the possibility that some covers previously revealed will be redesigned. But so far, 2016 is looking to be like a real let down when it comes to racial diversity on YA covers.
There are six books that feature boats or ships on covers in 2016 so far.
There is not one single — not one single — interracial couple on a YA book cover for 2016.+
There are plenty of white couples though.
But what’s really frustrating about seeing this isn’t just that there are not interracial couples depicted on 2016 YA covers yet. It’s that I can only think of one single YA book featuring an interracial couple at all, and that’s Sarah McCarry’s About A Girl cover. Granted, there are not a lot of YA covers that feature couples, period, but when you see a sea of boats and white-with-white couples, this absence becomes obvious. There are interracial couples in YA books and more, there are interracial couples in real teen life. Why aren’t we seeing that on covers?*
I suspect it’s asking a lot or expecting a lot, since the field of people of color on YA book covers is, itself, a thing that merits attention because it’s novel. The growth of flat design and illustration-driven covers clearly plays a part in this, too — I’ve spoken pretty openly about my dislike of the illustration trend because I find it kind of boring and monotonous, and I think it’s also been a convenient way for diversity on covers to be ignored further. Getting away from people on covers isn’t bad, but when they then become merely shadowy figures, what does that say about a commitment to showcasing reality? It’s like slapping sunglasses on Asian models on covers so they appear more white than they are (and yes, this is a thing — would you know she’s supposed to be Korean if you didn’t know from the book’s description?).
Can we do better though? This is reality. And seeing nothing but white couples on covers is a lie to reality and it’s a lie to the richness in YA as it stands now. I would love to highlight at least one, if not two, YA books featuring interracial couples from traditional publishers in 2016. We don’t tend to do cover reveals here, but I would do one in a heartbeat for a book like that, especially if it’s by an author of color. To suggest these books “don’t sell” or “don’t do well” because of “the market” is bullshit. They don’t do well because they’re not even being put out there TO do well. And when they are put out there, they aren’t given marketing budgets. Or they’re books written by white people who get a person of color on the cover and thus, money and attention. This is what our readers are looking for — our readers are primarily gate keepers who serve diverse teens and they deserve to know about these books in this way.
Here’s a round-up of the YA covers from major publishers (as well as some of the smaller traditional ones!) featuring people of color on them as seen so far for 2016. Descriptions are from Goodreads. Let me know if I’ve missed any big ones in the comments, and please, I want to know: what YA covers featuring interracial couples can you think of? Are there any beyond the one that McCarry advocated for on her own?**
Little White Lies by Brianna Baker and F. Bowman Hastie III (Soho Teen, February 9)***
Seventeen-year-old honors student Coretta White’s Tumblr, Little White Lies–a witty commentary on race and current events, as well as an exposé of her brilliant-yet-clueless parents–has just gone viral. She’s got hundreds of thousands of followers; she’s even been offered a TV deal. But Coretta has a confession: she hasn’t been writing her
own posts. Overwhelmed with the stress of keeping up with her schoolwork and applying for colleges, she has secretly hired a forty-one-year-old ghostwriter named Karl Ristoff to help her with the Tumblr. His contributions have helped make it a sensation, but unable to bear the guilt, Coretta eventually confesses the scandalous truth to a select
few to free herself of the burden.
The fallout is almost instantaneous. Before she knows it, her reputation has been destroyed. The media deal disappears. Even her boyfriend breaks up with her. Then Karl is thrust into the limelight, only to suffer a precipitous fall himself. Ultimately, the two join forces to find out who is responsible for ruining both of their lives . . . someone who might even have had the power to fuel their success in the first place. And to exact justice and a clever revenge, they must truly come clean to each other.
Peas and Carrots by Tanita S. Davis (Knopf, February 9)***
In this new YA novel by Tanita S. Davis, the Coretta Scott King Honor author of Mare’s War, a white teen named Dess is placed into foster care with a black family while her mother is incarcerated.
The Steep and Thorny Way by Cat Winters (Amulet, March 8)
1920s Oregon is not a welcoming place for Hanalee Denney, the daughter of a white woman and an African-American man. She has almost no rights by law, and the Ku Klux Klan breeds fear and hatred in even Hanalee’s oldest friendships. Plus, her father, Hank Denney, died a year ago, hit by a drunk-driving teenager. Now her father’s killer is out of jail and back in town, and he claims that Hanalee’s father wasn’t killed by the accident at all but, instead, was poisoned by the doctor who looked after him—who happens to be Hanalee’s new stepfather.
The only way for Hanalee to get the answers she needs is to ask Hank himself, a “haint” wandering the roads at night.
Flawed by Cecelia Ahern (Feiwel and Friends, April 5)
Celestine North lives a perfect life. She’s a model daughter and sister, she’s well-liked by her classmates and teachers, and she’s dating the impossibly charming Art Crevan.
But then Celestine encounters a situation where she makes an instinctive decision. She breaks a rule. And now faces life-changing repercussions.
She could be imprisoned. She could be branded. She could be found FLAWED.
The Skylighter by Becky Wallace (Margaret K McElderry/S&S, March 22)
Johanna and Rafi are in a race against time to save their country before a power-mad Keeper destroys everything they hold dear in the “enthralling magical world” (Cinda Williams Chima, author of The Heir Chronicles) introduced in The Storyspinner.
As the last of the royal line, Johanna is the only person who can heal a magical breach in the wall that separates her kingdom of Santarem from the land of the Keepers, legendary men and women who wield elemental magic. The barrier protects Santarem from those Keepers who might try to take power over mere humans…Keepers who are determined to stop Johanna and seize the wall’s power for themselves.
And they’re not the only ones. As the duchys of Santarem descend into war over the throne, Johanna relies more than ever on the advice of her handsome companion, Lord Rafael DeSilva. But Rafi is a duke too, and his people come first. As their friendship progresses into the beginnings of a tender relationship, Johanna must wonder: is Rafi looking out for her happiness, or does he want the throne for himself?
With war on the horizon, Johanna and Rafi dodge treacherous dukes and Keeper assassins as they race to through the countryside, determined to strengthen the wall before it’s too late…even if it means sacrificing their happiness for the sake of their world.
Saving Montgomery Sole by Mariko Tamaki (Roaring Brook, April 19)***
Montgomery Sole is a square peg in a small town, forced to go to a school full of jocks and girls who don’t even know what irony is. It would all be impossible if it weren’t for her best friends, Thomas and Naoki. The three are also the only members of Jefferson High’s Mystery Club, dedicated to exploring the weird and unexplained, from ESP and astrology to super powers and mysterious objects.
Then there’s the Eye of Know, the possibly powerful crystal amulet Monty bought online. Will it help her predict the future or fight back against the ignorant jerks who make fun of Thomas for being gay or Monty for having two moms? Maybe the Eye is here just in time, because the newest resident of their small town is scarier than mothmen, poltergeists, or, you know, gym.
Mirage by Tracy Clark (HMH, July 5)
Seventeen-year-old Ryan Poitier Sharpe is a gutsy, outgoing girl who spends her summer days hurling herself out of planes at her parents’ skydiving center in the Mojave Desert. Fiercely independent and willing to take risks, she challenges those around her to live life fully. But after a brush with death, Ryan is severely altered—she’s not the same thrill-seeking girl she once was and seems to be teetering on the edge of psychosis. As her relationships crumble and her life unravels, Ryan must fight the girl she’s become—or lose herself forever—in this eerie and atmospheric thriller.
So it turns out there is a list on Goodreads of YA and Middle Grade titles with POC lead characters, too. Here’s the link — and while maybe if you squint you can tell some of the YA titles include a person of color on the cover. . . I’m still completely underwhelmed.
*I realized after writing this, there is a second YA book I can think of with an interracial couple on the cover. That would be the paperback iteration of Una LaMarche’s Like No Other. Because the hardcover is illustrated and the characters have their backs to the reader, it’s not possible to tell.
**Sarah McCarry is white and thus has some sway in what she wants to happen in a way that minority authors wouldn’t have. Were she a woman of color advocating for a cover like the one she was able to get, I’m not sure she would have been as fortunate.
***These books are also written by readily identifiable authors of color. So fewer than half. Come on.
+ Guess what I discovered after writing this post? Two YA books hitting shelves in 2016 with interracial couples on the cover. Check Them Out. I still stand by my words, though: we need more.
Z says
Simone elekEleS’s books make
Me uncomfortabLe since the Perfect ChEmistry book trAiler. IT”s very frustrating.
But it’s great to see The new diverse CoveRs.
Kelly says
UNDER THE LIGHTS by Dahlia Adler & The Summer of Chasing Mermaids by Sarah Ockler both feature interracial couples on the cover, as do a few of Elkeles’s other books <-- comments from Twitter.
Kelly says
MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED by Jennifer Echols features an interracial couple on the cover
Kelly says
TRANSCENDENCE by CJ Omololu and EVERYTHING BUT THE TRUTH by Mandy Hubbard
Libertad says
Not sure how I feel about Simone’s books making this list seeing how perfect chemistry was so obviously stereotypical and racist with its depiction Of Latino young men. Sure the effort was nice but as someone who identifies as Latina I’m so tired of people being comfortable with Latino boys/men being bad boys or gang members especially with a white love interest.
Kelly says
You’re the second person to mention that, so thank you! I think there’s a lot of value in pointing that out — it’s not good, even if the effort is nice.
Frankly, we need GOOD depictions of interracial romance and we need covers that depict this in non-stereotypical ways, too.
Libertad says
Some suggestions though since I’m practically an expert on this subject lol are:
1. A Living Violet and all of its sequels by Jamie reed.
2.Bright lights, dark knights by Stephen emond
3. How to salsa in a sari by Dona sarkar
4. Dragon’s mind by vered ehsani
5. Unleashed by kristopher reisz
6. Flirt, the portrait of us by a.Destiny and Rhonda helms
7. Taylor Davis and the clash of kingdoms by Michelle isenhoff
8. The lies we tell ourselves by robin Talley
9. A song for bijou by Josh farrar
10. The rivers of zadaa by d.j. McHale
11. Unbound by Tricia drammeh
12. Game world by cj farley
13. Romiette and Julio by Sharon draped
14. Biggest flirt by Jennifer echols( even though Tia was a white Latina, in my book that still mad them interracial since here in the USA we count Latino as a race)
And that’s just what’s on my bookshelf at the moment. Not what’s sitting in my Amazon cart lol. Dont mind me for bombarding with this overwhelming list, it’s just I buy books based on this reason lol. I really wish there were interracial couples featuring couples that are two poc(e.g black and Asian couple, black and Latino couple, Asian and Latino couple) I think that would be awesome! Sometimes I feel like interracial in this country means poc+white. Interracial couples need diversifying too!
Kelly says
This is an awesome list — I don’t mind you sharing them AT ALL. Thank you!! I want to do a big round-up of all of the suggestions for a post, but lady, if you want to write one for me, I would be thrilled to host it (you’ve done a ton of work here and you should get credit for it!). You know how to reach me. And if you think of others, lay ’em on me, too!
I 100% agree — I want to see interracial couples that are not white person and a person of color. That’s ONE representation, but it’s certainly not representative of everything in the world, not even the small slice of the library world where I worked.
Libertad says
Omg I would love to!!!! Please, please,please let me lol! That would be awesomesauce! When do you need it by?
Claudia Martinez says
Sammy and JUliana in Hollywood By BenJAMIN ALIRE SAENZ. NOT NEW, But a great example Of Non-White Couple from a modern CLASSic:
http://www.cincopuntos.com/products_detail.sstg?id=85
Zoraida says
I LOVE THAT BOOK.
Anna says
MY UPCOMING RELEASE IS ABOUT A PLUS-SIZED GIRL AND SHE’S PART OF AN INTERACIAL COUPLE, BUT THE COVER DOESN’T DEPICT THIS AT ALL. I REALLY HAD NO SAY IN THE COVER EITHER AND I WAS A BIT DISAPPOINTED THAT SHE DIDN’T APPEAR PLUS-SIZED ON THE COVER NOR DID IT FEATURE THE INTERACIAL COUPLE.. ONE DAY, I HOPE TO CHANGE THAT!
Kelly says
Everything about this comment saddens me….no fat girl NOR no interracial couple? Sigh.
Anna says
i KNOW. i WAS VERY SAD TOO. EVERY SINGLE OPTION WAS OF A SKINNY GIRL. I GUESS STOCK PHOTOS THAT PUBLISHERS USE AREN’T SUPER VARIED. tHAT’S WHAT i’M TELLING MYSELF…
Amie Stuart says
The plus size heroine cover struggle is also real!! IT’s not even publisher’s faults (I’m self-pubbed). Ther’es just not enough decent stock. photos—period! for my last cover, I had to photoshop her bigger!!
Sarah @ sarah says read says
I love this. It’d be great if someone would do a massive data-gathering project on couple representation on covers across all genres – for interracial couples, white couples, lbgtq couples, etc.
As a person that’s been in an interracial relationship for 8 years, it’s VERY frustrating to never be able to buy a card that has a couple on it, because that couple is never interracial, and I’m not giving my poc fiance a card with 2 white people on it. It’s not representative of us. We need to do better at this in all kinds of markets.
Tara says
Heads up that Emily Skrutskie’s 2016 book, THE ABYSS SURROUNDS US, has a POC on the cover. 🙂
Dahlia ADler says
Was just coming to suggest the same one! The paperback redesign of LIKE NO OTHER by Una LaMarche has an interracial couple as well. I *must* be able to come up with more…
Kelly says
That one I noted in the post — I thought of it after drafting (It’s one of the stars at the end — hah!).