Hermione Harris wrote in
Race & Class: "Of the scores of books about race and black communities in Britain that had appeared during the 1960s and early 1970s, the great majority are written by white academic ultimately concerned with the relationship between white society and black 'immigrants'. Few accounts have emerged from those on the receiving end of British racism or liberalism of their own black experience. On the specific situation of black women there is almost nothing.
Second Class Citizen is therefore something of a revelation." A new edition of the book was published for the
Penguin Modern Classics series in October 2020, after many years of being out of print. John Self in
The Guardian wrote that, despite being on
Granta magazine's
Best of Young British Novelists list in 1983, in subsequent years Emecheta "...didn't get the column inches. So it's a late justice that she is one of the few Granta alumni, alongside
Martin Amis and
Shiva Naipaul, to be promoted to the Penguin Modern Classics list."
Ainehi Edoro, writing in the
Times Literary Supplement, observed that
Second Class Citizen "is a book about dreams, a fact often forgotten in the hurry to present it as a primer on race and gender politics", noting that while the novel explores these issues, "it also tells a story of utopian awakening: of how Adah, a girl fated by patriarchy to be silent and insignificant, finds the voice to tell the world that she matters." ==References==