Jonathan Franzen "embarrassed" he doesn't know more black people
NEW YORK -- Award-winning novelist Jonathan Franzen has an admittedly uncomfortable reason for why he doesn't expect to write a book about racial relations: He doesn't know many blacks.
In an interview that appeared last weekend on Slate.com, the author of "The Corrections" said he had few black friends and had "never been in love" with a black woman. He called his comments "an embarrassing confession."
Franzen's remarks were widely criticized, with National Book Award finalist Angela Flournoy tweeting that Franzen's books were indeed "about race," if only because they expressed a white perspective.
Author Celeste Ng tweeted that Franzen showed a "failure of writing and of humanity." In response, Joyce Carol Oates suggested Franzen's detractors "cast the first stone" and write "stronger novels than J.F." Oates called that the "best revenge."
That's a failure of writing and of humanity. https://t.co/Wx20JRANhW
— Celeste Ng (@pronounced_ing) August 1, 2016
Let he/she who is without "failures of writing & of humanity" cast the first stone & write stronger novels than J.F. https://t.co/CE0gMbVI2t
— Joyce Carol Oates (@JoyceCarolOates) August 1, 2016
JF speaks with the naivete & artlessness of an era before people pitilessly combed through others' remarks seek- https://t.co/CW8VFgbTyY
— Joyce Carol Oates (@JoyceCarolOates) August 1, 2016
Oates then blocked Ng on Twitter.