Toronto Star

Satire takes on unchecked racism

- RAGAN CLARK

A fear-driven, racially charged world is the land in which the narrator of We Cast a Shadow lives. Half the black community — and eight out of 10 black men — are arrested in their lifetime. A ghetto has been fortified, walling in the black population for the “health, safety and general welfare” of citizens. Curfews are enforced.

Those who break the law can be deported. And for the narrator, a black man lucky enough to have avoided prison (unlike his father) and who holds a position at a law firm, his top priority is creating a better life for his son — even if that means turning him white.

Maurice Carlos Ruffi n weaves many threads, from the fragile complexity of a father-son relationsh­ip to a person's capacity f or change. The world Ruffin creates is semi-satiricall­y extreme, yet there is an air of plausibili­ty that is unsettling. What is the result of fear, power and discrimina­tion left unchecked? And where is the line between protecting your own and subjecting them to the very prejudice that has ruled your world?

Heart-wrenching and morally ambiguous, We Cast a Shadow explores questions of justice and self-actualizat­ion. Life’s fulfilment may only seem within reach when cultural assimilati­on to the most extreme degree takes place. But what is the price that is paid?

The moral high ground in such a society is reserved for those who haven't faced discrimina­tion themselves, from the narrator’s perspectiv­e.

Unapologet­ic in his ability to make the reader uncomforta­ble, We Cast a Shadow is a challengin­g, thought-provoking debut by Ruffin.

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