Why Everyone’s Talking About American Dirt - Oprah's new book club pick that she'll regret

Scarlett Johansson

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A headshot of Jeanine Cummins next to the cover of American Dirt.


Jeanine Cummins.

Photo illustration by Slate. Images by Joe Kennedy and Macmillan Publishers.

Why is literary Twitter piling on Jeanine Cummins’ American Dirt, once one of the most highly anticipated books of the year? After an intense bidding war among nine houses that ended in a reported seven-figure deal, the novel landed on both the New York Times’ and LitHub’s 2020-in-reading lists. It’s in stores Tuesday, accompanied by praise from heavyweights like Stephen King, Sandra Cisneros, and Don Winslow—the last of whom compared the migrant drama novel to John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath. A film adaptation is already in the works by the same company that produced Clint Eastwood’s The Mule.


But an increasingly vocal contingent of Mexican and Mexican American writers has panned the novel as “trauma porn,” pointing out myriad inconsistencies and errors in Cummins’ descriptions of Mexico that a largely American, non-Spanish-speaking industry of agents, editors, and publicists seemed to not have been able to notice.


Over the long weekend, the slowly brewing clash spilled onto the pages of the New York Times books section. Here’s what’s going on.



The Book


American Dirt follows the journey of a mother and son fleeing Mexico for America after their entire family is murdered on the orders of a local cartel kingpin. Before the slaughter, Lydia Quixano Pérez is a bookseller in Acapulco, mother to Luca and wife to journalist Sebastián. It is Sebastián’s exposé on the kingpin, who also happens to be a frequent customer of Lydia’s bookstore, that serves as the linchpin for the violence that sets off the novel and Lydia’s journey through the desert to the border.


In her afterword Cummins describes a four-year writing process that included extensive travel and interviews in Mexico. Cummins writes of her desire to humanize “the faceless brown mass” that she believes is so many people’s perception of immigrants. “I wish someone slightly browner than me would write it,” she continues. “But then I thought, if you’re the person who has the capacity to be a bridge, why not be a bridge.” I’m sure you can see where this bridge is going.



The Backlash


At first glance, the criticism of American Dirt reads as the increasingly pro forma conversation about who’s allowed to tell whose story. On one side are Mexican and Mexican American writers asking why Cummins felt the need to tell this story, other than to individuate a “faceless brown mass” that she’s not a part of—simultaneously raising the question of who exactly sees that mass as faceless and whether it’s worth writing for them. On the other side is Cummins raising a familiar alarm on how conversations around cultural appropriation will eventually morph into censorship. In a profile in the Times touching on the controversy, she said, “I do think that the conversation about cultural appropriation is incredibly important, but I also think that there is a danger sometimes of going too far toward silencing people.”

The public debate began with a review of American Dirt by Myriam Gurba* published in Tropics of Meta, an academic blog that publishes essays on a broad range of topics. Gurba takes to task not only Cummins’ identity—she apparently identified as white as recently as four years ago, when she wrote in the New York Times that she wasn’t qualified to write about race—but also American Dirt’s similarity to other books about Mexico that Cummins used for research, as well as the novel’s ignorance of the very people the book purports to represent. “That Lydia is so shocked by her own country’s day-to-day realities […] gives the impression that Lydia might not be … a credible Mexican,” Gurba writes. “In fact, she perceives her own country through the eyes of a pearl-clutching American tourist.”




Gurba also dropped that she was originally assigned to review American Dirt by “an editor at a feminist magazine”—later revealed to be Ms. While her editor thought the review was “spectacular,” Gurba wrote, it was nonetheless killed because Gurba “lacked the fame to pen something so ‘negative.’ ”


Though Gurba’s review was published over a month ago, in the days before American Dirt hit the shelves it was shared again and again. Writers like Jose Antonio Vargas and Viet Thanh Nguyen publicly called for Ms. to account for why they decided to kill the review.



The New York Times


But the pan with the biggest reach came this weekend when Parul Sehgal wrote for the New York Times’ daily Books of the Times section that “this peculiar book flounders and fails.” Two days later, the Times Book Review published Lauren Groff’s conflicted review, which makes the case that the novel “was written with good intentions, and like all deeply felt books, it calls its imagined ghosts into the reader’s real flesh.”


What’s literary drama without the Gray Lady? The differences between Sehgal’s and Groff’s reviews were noted as soon as the latter published on Sunday. Soon after Groff’s review dropped, it was linked from the Book Review’s Twitter account with a line more complimentary than any that exists in the published review: “ ‘American Dirt’ is one of the most wrenching books I have read in the past few years, with the ferocity and political reach of the best of Theodore Dreiser’s novels.” Groff responded, “Please take this down and post my actual review.” (She added, “Fucking nightmare.”) The tweet, according to Groff and, later, New York Times Book Review editor Pamela Paul, had mistakenly been pulled from an earlier draft of the review—one that perhaps started out more positive about American Dirt than it ended up. Groff seemed to agonize over the review in public, eventually tweeting, “I give up. Obviously I finished my review long before I knew of Parul’s—anyone who has gone through edits knows the editing timeline—but hers is better and smarter anyway. I wrestled like a beast with this review, the morals of my taking it on, my complicity in the white gaze.”


Once upon a time, books frequently received reviews from both the daily Times and the Book Review, but that’s much rarer now. These days it happens only to the most newsworthy or most highly anticipated books—which often happen to be their publishers’ seasonal lead titles, the ones that get the biggest publicity budgets. In addition to those reviews, the Times also published an excerpt for some reason. Oh, and the profile. All of which makes Cummins’ fears—stated in the New York Times!—about being “silenced” seem a bit silly. For the big-money book publicity machine to wield its influence on behalf of a novel about the Mexican immigrant experience written by a non-immigrant, non-Mexican author—when books by Mexican and Mexican American writers often struggle to see daylight—is another reminder of what the industry deems valuable. Cummins’ good intentions have largely been acknowledged, but as Rebecca Makkai wrote in LitHub last year—and linked to on Tuesday, “apropos of nothing”—“I [can’t] good-person myself into good writing.”


Still, the conversation seems to have reached its peak and is calming down. Let’s just hope Oprah doesn’t pick American Dirt for her book club or anything.

~~~~~

She mentioned in an interview her husband was an undocumented immigrant and that that is her personal connection to writing it.

"I dont even know how to divorce that from the person who I am. It's been such a big experience in my life that it influences the way I think about everything. But my husband is from Ireland, and so his experiences as an undocumented immigrant, while terrifying, were nothing compared to what they may have been were he Latino or Muslim. He's white. He's educated. He is super handsome. [Laughs.] He is a member of the most beloved ethnic immigrant community, arguably, in this country. People love the Irish. I mean, they can't get enough of them."
 

SiccDicc

The Defenestrator
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After an intense bidding war among nine houses that ended in a reported seven-figure deal, the novel landed on both the New York Times’ and LitHub’s 2020-in-reading lists.
“I wish someone slightly browner than me would write it,” she continues. “But then I thought, if you’re the person who has the capacity to be a bridge, why not be a bridge.”
I'm rarely one to push for this... but she herself is talking about being a white savior of sorts with that "be the bridge" nonsense in that she hopes to humanize a crisis that exceeds Dunbar's number. So will we be seeing any of that seven figure number going towards actually building a literal bridge or, I dunno, funding immigration attorneys looking to help genuine people? Maybe? They have such trust funds, you know, and legitimate organizations. I mean if she was just writing to write something and make money that's one thing, but be honest about it.

What I'm trying to say is that her attitude irks me and...

"I don't even know how to divorce that from the person who I am. It's been such a big experience in my life that it influences the way I think about everything. But my husband is from Ireland, and so his experiences as an undocumented immigrant, while terrifying, were nothing compared to what they may have been were he Latino or Muslim. He's white. He's educated. He is super handsome. [Laughs.] He is a member of the most beloved ethnic immigrant community, arguably, in this country. People love the Irish. I mean, they can't get enough of them."
... he has to go back.
 

crocodilian

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What proof is there anyone cares about this book at all? The scathing reviews of two journalists nobody ever heard of? Endorsement by Stephen King, the self-appointed McDonalds of literature? Oprah may be shamelessly shilling this waste of ink, but there's less than two thousand user reviews on Goodreads and five (yes, five) reviews on Amazon.

Based on this article, American Dirt totally failed to enamor common audiences, who are either smart enough to see it as political baiting or simply don't care about the fictionally-recounted plight of an illegal immigrant. It also failed to enamor Mexicans (and, I assume, actual illegal immigrants), who see the experiences described as the inauthentic ramblings of some gringo totally divorced from their culture. Nobody, other than a handful of wealthy people looking to stoke their investment, seem interested in this book.

Even the synopsis provided isn't interesting on a conceptual level; my most immediate thought reading it was "Why would a Mexican drug kingpin have difficulty locating an illegal immigrant? They run the entire immigration racket, and there's so many cartel connections spanning modern America as a result of illegal immigration that finding these people — who, again, utilized their own trafficking networks — would be trivial."

American Dirt seems to have failed on every basic level, so now journalists have been corralled in to do the only thing they're any good at: relentlessly prattle. This crowing, they pray, will generate enough controversy to forcibly wedge the nonsensical account into modern America's zeitgeist, which in turn will make their immediate decision to start producing a film adaptation feel less like a stupid idea. Maybe the white supremacists will even try protesting it, providing even more free publicity as the country kvetches about invasive demographics yet again.

tl;dr - Who actually gives a shit about this book? Am I stupid for even thinking about it for more than a few seconds?
 

Adolf Honkler

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What proof is there anyone cares about this book at all? The scathing reviews of two journalists nobody ever heard of? Endorsement by Stephen King, the self-appointed McDonalds of literature? Oprah may be shamelessly shilling this waste of ink, but there's less than two thousand user reviews on Goodreads and five (yes, five) reviews on Amazon.

Based on this article, American Dirt totally failed to enamor common audiences, who are either smart enough to see it as political baiting or simply don't care about the fictionally-recounted plight of an illegal immigrant. It also failed to enamor Mexicans (and, I assume, actual illegal immigrants), who see the experiences described as the inauthentic ramblings of some gringo totally divorced from their culture. Nobody, other than a handful of wealthy people looking to stoke their investment, seem interested in this book.

Even the synopsis provided isn't interesting on a conceptual level; my most immediate thought reading it was "Why would a Mexican drug kingpin have difficulty locating an illegal immigrant? They run the entire immigration racket, and there's so many cartel connections spanning modern America as a result of illegal immigration that finding these people — who, again, utilized their own trafficking networks — would be trivial."

American Dirt seems to have failed on every basic level, so now journalists have been corralled in to do the only thing they're any good at: relentlessly prattle. This crowing, they pray, will generate enough controversy to forcibly wedge the nonsensical account into modern America's zeitgeist, which in turn will make their immediate decision to start producing a film adaptation feel less like a stupid idea. Maybe the white supremacists will even try protesting it, providing even more free publicity as the country kvetches about invasive demographics yet again.

tl;dr - Who actually gives a shit about this book? Am I stupid for even thinking about it for more than a few seconds?

The author has over 2,000 followers on twitter. Checkmate, nazi!
 

QuokkaCaptain

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humanize the faceless brown mass

The literal minute I read that, I knew this was going to be panned as white-saviorism. I love it when the woke pull out a gun and blow their own foot off with it.

But then, to be fair, a lot of modern racial politics does that: They shame white people so hard that (effectively guilted) white people then overcompensate to make up for it, and it does loop around to "I have to fix the problem that I caused", not getting that they're doing white man's burden 2.0.

sometimes of going too far toward silencing people

"sometimes"

"SOMETIMES"

She mentioned in an interview her husband was an undocumented immigrant and that that is her personal connection to writing it.

Then to her I say: Good job outing your husband as an illegal immigrant, dumbass.

Seriously: What the fuck is it with people outing themselves/people they know as illegal immigrants, all while simultaneously screaming about how Trump is pulling them out of their homes and deporting them? Does that not put a huge target on the supposed illegal-immigrant's back? Either the problem isn't as bad as they claim it is, or they are really stupid.
 

Mrdeadmandt

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I have no problem at all with someone writing a story with characters outside their own race or culture.

What's happening it that there are a lot of very vocal SJW types in writing/publishing, and they're really trying to stake claim to what they see is THEIR topic. Mexicans that say it's racist for a white person to write about Mexicans would not hold themselves to the same standard when they write about white people.

One of the SJW types pushing this is Gabino Iglesias, a keyboard warrior that has a picture of him literally hugging his keyboard!

5823601.jpg


There are people in the horror writing world that seem afraid to call him out for his crap, but it's happening. When a Mexican supports creative segregation for whites only, you gotta say something.

 

Lemmingwise

The capture of the last white wizard, decolorized
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I'm really surprised, usually my radar is accurate, but this writer doesn't seem to be jewish at all.
 

QuokkaCaptain

The happiest of all the marsupials
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What proof is there anyone cares about this book at all? The scathing reviews of two journalists nobody ever heard of? Endorsement by Stephen King, the self-appointed McDonalds of literature? Oprah may be shamelessly shilling this waste of ink, but there's less than two thousand user reviews on Goodreads and five (yes, five) reviews on Amazon.

If he's a Big Mac, then what the fuck is James Patterson? Some of his earlier books aren't awful, but nowadays he can't write anything without- uh- "collaborating" with another person. That's how he puts out, like, fifty books a year.

As for American Dirt's sales... Well. I work at a bookstore, and I've been keeping an eye on it as the days have gone by. See, when a book like this comes out (Oprah's Book Club! Super topical! Political! Woke!) it flies off the shelves pretty quickly. An American Marriage by Tayari Jones (the last Oprah Book Club book I can recall off the top of my head) sold out pretty quickly. It was in big demand when it came out, and it was consistently in-demand even after the initial hype died down.

But from what I can tell, American Dirt isn't moving nearly as well. Sure, it's selling a few copies here and there, but at no point have we been in danger of selling out. The display we have it on hasn't even gotten very light. I can't tell if it's the controversy that's keeping it on the shelves, or if maybe it's just not generating the same interest as An American Marriage did, or if maybe (perhaps the least likely option) people are just tired of reading books that they know are definitely going to preach at them?

Whatever the case, it's not doing nearly as well as they'd hoped it would. I'll be curious to see how Oprah handles it.
 

Scarlett Johansson

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82 authors are pushing for Oprah to reconsider.
Shit just got real lol
 

Someone in a Tree

It's the ripple, not the sea that is happening
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82 authors are pushing for Oprah to reconsider.
Shit just got real lol
I guess I’d be more impressed if I had read the works of more than five of those authors (two of them for whom I did not care) and if I had any idea who most of them are.
 

stuffandthings

Inflammatory Metacommentary
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I love watching wokeness witch burnings. There's nothing they love more than eating their own.

No one understands the power of writing a book, releasing it, and stonewalling any backlash with, "What I have written, I have written."

Every additional statement you make in response to social justice policing just gives every twitter sperg and internet article mill another excuse to release more content.
 
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