Racebook, Tochi Onyebuchi
Racebook, Tochi Onyebuchi
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Racebook
A Personal History of the Internet

Author: Tochi Onyebuchi

Narrator: Kevin R. Free

Unabridged: 6 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/14/2025


Synopsis

From the author of Hugo and NAACP Image Award finalist Riot Baby, an original memoir in essays that interrogates how the relationship between race and the internet has evolved over three decades

When Tochi Onyebuchi realized his acclaimed science fiction and fantasy career had been centrally preoccupied with race, it prompted him to consider his responsibilities as a Black writer in the internet age. In brilliantly crafted essays, Onyebuchi excavates the internet of the late 1990s and early 2000s, tracing his online persona back to its origins to explore how both evolved in the ensuing decades. Brimming with voracious curiosity and razor-sharp wit, Racebook is a penetrating meditation on how identity and race are forged in the crucible of being online.

Beginning with the current moment when everything is a matter of dispute, back to Web 1.0’s promises of greater equality and a bright digital future, Onyebuchi deftly examines internet culture and its role in shaping our perception of ourselves, our world, and the potential realities we can envision. From the ever-changing nature of personal writing and free expression, to gaming, manga, fandom, and virtual reality, Racebook considers the internet alongside works of literature both classic and new, asking if our vision for what is possible has really broadened. And given the inequities Black people still face, on and off the page, does the internet only amplify our failures of imagination?

An original investigation of race through the lens of the modern internet age and an affecting journey into the heart of community online, Racebook argues for recognizing the individual behind the binary code that shapes our digital lives. As Onyebuchi asks, “Is this a race book or is it not? Is it either-or? Can it be both-and? Can I?”

About Tochi Onyebuchi

Tochi Onyebuchi is the author of the young adult novel Beasts Made of Night, which won the Ilube Nommo Award for Best Speculative Fiction Novel by an African, its sequel, Crown of Thunder, and War Girls. His novella Riot Baby, a finalist for the Hugo, the Nebula, the Locus, the Ignyte, and the NAACP Image Awards, won the New England Book Award for Fiction and an ALA Alex Award. He holds a B.A. from Yale, a M.F.A. in screenwriting from the Tisch School for the Arts, a Master's degree in droit économique from Sciences Po, and a J.D. from Columbia Law School. His fiction has appeared in Panverse Three, Asimov’s Science Fiction, Obsidian, Omenana Magazine, Uncanny, and Lightspeed. His non-fiction has appeared in Tor.com, Nowhere Magazine, the Oxford University Press blog, and the Harvard Journal of African American Public Policy, among other places.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Rachael on May 23, 2025

This essay collection is everything. You will laugh. You will cry. You will generally have a great time and if you(like Tochi)are a nerd in any way, then you will see yourself in his essays. Some of them are utterly harrowing as the delve into the horrors that the internet has allowed us to have eas......more

Goodreads review by fede ૮ ․ ․ ྀིა on November 18, 2025

arc kindly sent by the publisher. all opinions are my own. “are we making money in order to advance the human race? or are we advancing the human race to make money?” this collection of essays is an exploration of technology advancement, capitalism and, most of all, everything that makes us human. be......more

Goodreads review by Sarah on June 08, 2025

Book Review: Racebook: A Personal History of the Internet by Tochi Onyebuchi - A Public Health Practitioner’s Perspective Tochi Onyebuchi’s Racebook is a searing, genre-defying memoir that excavates the internet’s dual role as both a liberator and an oppressor in shaping racial identity and public he......more

Goodreads review by Dusty on November 19, 2025

This was a tough one for me. It’s a personal memoir in essays about a young Black man who leaves the U.S. after a police shooting and tries to rebuild his life in Paris. There’s a lot here about identity, trauma, art, diaspora, and the weight of being Black in America no matter where you run. All of......more

Goodreads review by nestle • whatnestleread on October 31, 2025

i must say, i really enjoyed this!! it's a sharp and fascinating essay collection about the internet and what it means to live, write, and exist online. so much ground is covered here—race, politics, gaming, content moderation, writing communities, and the way the internet has shifted from those ear......more