Starry-eyed, privileged beauty meets world: that’s the formula for countless media-based coming-of-age stories since the dawn of The Bell Jar, and it’s a formula debut author and former Vogue intern R.J. Hernández finds reductive and troubling. They’re simplistic, he says, and not reflective of reality. We know how these stories go. The protagonist, a young, plucky and privileged, educated — if insecure — white woman, gets the job of her dreams at a glossy and learns the world of magazine publishing isn’t all that she imagined it would be. She is aghast at the reality: evil figureheads, backstabbing coworkers, corporate politics, and little-to-no opportunity to grow. But she ends up learning something about herself in the process. "In contrast, my protagonist isn’t a privileged white woman, but a queer person of color who is struggling within this world, because he doesn’t fit in," Hernández tells Racked. His first novel, An Innocent Fashion (HarperCollins, July 5), casts a light on these oft-ignored stories. |