Description
Called “Essential” by Marlon James, winner of the Man Booker Prize 2015, and longlisted for the prestigious Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge is the groundbreaking, fearlessly honest, and brilliantly argued book that sparked a global conversation about race — and has never stopped being relevant since.
British journalist and author Reni Eddo-Lodge began with a viral blog post expressing her exhaustion at trying to discuss racism with those who refuse to acknowledge it — and what followed became one of the most important and widely read books on race in Britain and beyond. With razor-sharp clarity, she examines structural racism, white privilege, feminism’s complicated relationship with race, and the politics of racial identity — drawing on British history that is rarely taught and experiences that are rarely heard. For Kenyan diaspora readers living and working in the UK, Kenyan students of sociology and politics, and anyone seeking to understand race in a British and global context, this book is absolutely essential reading.
What this book covers:
- The history of race and racism in Britain — the untold story most schools never teach
- How structural racism operates invisibly in institutions, media, and everyday life
- White privilege — what it is, why it matters, and why so many resist acknowledging it
- The intersection of race and feminism — and why mainstream feminism often fails Black women
- Why honest conversations about race require courage, discomfort, and genuine willingness to listen
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💰 Price: Ksh 100 only
Perfect for: Kenyan diaspora readers in the UK, sociology and political science students, social justice advocates, journalists, educators, feminists, and every reader ready to engage honestly and courageously with race in British and global society.











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