![]() I ran my finger over his face, saying his amazing cheekbones were so prominent because Koreans are direct descendants of the Mongols.” I’m not kidding.Īnd not in the least, Farr herself is a white woman writing about race.īut ultimately, she won me over. The rest of that section explains her husband-to-be’s good looks in the following way: “Shoulders as wide as his reside only above the Mekong because his ancestors had to work the land without the help of a river. Then there’s the cringe-worthy manner in which she describes her first encounter with her husband: from across the dance floor at a wedding, she beckons to him with one finger, while pulling her eye into a slant with another. ![]() Why then this photo? Two hundred eighty pages later, I still couldn’t figure it out. It is obviously not Farr Farr, as she describes herself numerous times in the book, is a brunette with olive skin. First of all, there is the tasteless and unnecessary cover photo: A naked, fair-skinned blonde woman is lying on her back, legs up and crossed at the ankles, hands covering her breasts. There is much in Diane Farr’s memoir Kissing Outside the Lines to put one off. ![]()
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