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“No sabes la suerte que tienes por ser güera,” mi abuela would exclaim when I was young, usually after I complained about the nickname mi familia had given me, “la güera”. She was right. At the time, I didn’t fully understand the “luck”—what I now recognize as the privilege of being light-skinned, with curly reddish-brown hair.

Dark Dude is a heartfelt coming-of-age story that speaks directly to white-passing Latinos, Chicanos, and Hispanos navigating the often-unspoken complexities of identity. It beautifully captures the challenge of finding a public self that allows mixed-race, bicultural, and bilingual identities to coexist, without judgment, discrimination, or hate.

The story explores how dual identity and unearned privilege shape a young person’s search for belonging, purpose, and self-understanding. These layers add depth and honesty to a journey many of us recognize, even if we didn’t have the language for it at the time.

Simply put, Dark Dude is the book many of us needed when we were teens, and one that still resonates deeply today.

A Pulitzer Prize-winning author makes his teen fiction debut with a gritty coming-of-age novel that is full of details and icons of teenage life in the 1960s: the lure of the hippie culture, the fight to fit in, and the desperate need to break away.

$13.99 Paperback

Rico didn’t say good-bye. He didn’t leave a phone number. And he didn’t plan on coming back—ever. In the Midwest, Rico could blend in, his light hair and lighter skin disguising his background. He would no longer be the “dark dude,” the punching bag for the whole neighborhood. Trading Harlem for Wisconsin, though, means giving up on a big part of his identity. And when Rico no longer has to prove that he’s Latino, he almost stops being one. Except that he can never have an ordinary white kid’s life, because there are some things that can’t be left behind, things that will follow you a thousand miles away. When Rico discovers that picket-fenced apple-pie people can be just as violent and judgmental as the neighbors he left behind, he is forced to swallow an uncomfortable truth: no longer an outsider by his appearance, Rico is still an outsider.

$15.26 Audiobook

Sententia Vera Bookshop is a multicultural, multilingual, and independent virtual bookstore. While we carry most published books, we promote the voices and stories of writers who are often underrepresented or unknown to the broader audience. Our recommendations highlight works by authors of color, women, and women-identifying writers, as well as ethnic, foreign, and non-conforming voices, offered in the original languages, translations, and bilingual editions.

Beyond books, audiobooks, music, and film, we encourage connection through language and cultural exploration.