Author and activist Sil Lai Abrams was born to a Chinese immigrant mother and a white American father. Out of her family, Sil Lai was the only one with a tousle of wild curls and brown skin. When she asked about her darker complexion, she was given vague answers. At fourteen, the man she knew her entire life as her birth-father divulged that Abrams was not his biological child, but instead the daughter of a man of African descent who didn’t know she existed.
This shocking news sparked a quest for healing that would take her down the painful road to reclaim her identity despite the overt racism in her community and her own internalized racism and self-hatred. Abrams struggled with depression, abuse, and an addiction that nearly destroyed her. But eventually she would leave behind the shame over her birthright and move toward a celebration of her blackness.
Get your copy here on Amazon
Subscribe Now
Join our free email list to stay up to date with BWA news and events.
Subscribe to receive the latest issue of BWA Magazine each month.
BWA
BWA Magazine proudly celebrates the profound impact of Black women authors, whose voices resonate across generations, continents, and cultures.
CONTACT
BWA Magazine
hello@BWAmagazine.com
Subscribe Now
Join our free email list to stay up to date with BWA news and events.
Subscribe to recieve the latest issue of BWA Magazine each month.
BWA Magazine proudly celebrates the profound impact of Black women authors, whose voices resonate across generations, continents, and cultures.
CONTACT
BWA Magazine
hello@BWAmagazine.com