

“Where are my people? And where’s the representation?” Dr. “I’m just so thankful that now ‘happy ever after’ includes everyone,” she adds. “She went through a lot of suffering, but she had a will to survive that I haven’t read about for a long, long time,” Dr. Riley made a point of depicting the pleasures and triumphs in her life, not just the pain, which is often all that Black romance characters are allowed. Putting Thomas at the center of her latest novel, “Island Queen,” published in July, Dr.

“For her to be completely wiped off the books just blows my mind.” “I mean, this is an enormously fabulous woman who rose against all kinds of odds,” says Dr. Riley wondered why she hadn’t encountered entrepreneurial women of color beating the odds in colonial islands before. For author Vanessa Riley, creating full-blown characters is critical to righting the historical record.Īn avid reader of Regency romance, Dr. Today, Uvalde will be honoring them, and as the town journeys toward calmer waters, it will never forget them.Īs historians unearth the stories of Black lives in British colonial times, novelists are lending imagination and romance to the effort. Maite Rodriguez will never study marine biology.Today, I’m thinking of those 19 children and two teachers. Eva Mireles will never go on another hike. Rojelio Torres will never catch another football.

Tess Mata will never throw another softball. Today is as much about them as anything, and anyone, else. Here I want to devote a few words to those who are no longer here. It looks at the aftermath, at the past year, at the living. The town has been grieving, and it has been tense and divided.Our story today will describe that in more detail. One fewer journalist in Uvalde today is no bad thing, we thought. It’s one reason the Monitor chose last week to visit. Pedestrians glanced at the memorial as they continued about their day.“Everyone is walking on eggshells,” one local told me last week. Twenty-one white crosses surround the fountain downtown, decorated with stuffed animals and superhero action figures that filled my eyes with tears. Twenty-one white crosses are staked in front of a “Welcome to Uvalde” sign. The town I visited last week was quiet, but eerie. Now make it unexpected, add a global media frenzy and a heavy dose of politics, and multiply it by a population of 15,000, and you can begin to imagine what the last 12 months have been like in Uvalde.The town was shellshocked when I visited a year ago. It has been a difficult, surreal year for a town that, like so many others, never thought it would be anything other than a quiet, anonymous town. Grief is a journey – and a long, complicated one at that.Uvalde, Texas, will never be the same after the horrific shooting at Robb Elementary School last May.
