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It started with a tweet. What if Harry Potter attended an HBCU? Now it's a book series

It all began with a post on Twitter. It was 2020 during the height of the pandemic and LaDarrion Williams was thinking about the lack of diversity in the fantasy genre.
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Author LaDarrion Williams poses for a portrait in Los Angeles on Thursday, April 25, 2024, to promote his book "Blood at the Root." (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

It all began with a post on Twitter. It was 2020 during the height of the pandemic and LaDarrion Williams was thinking about the lack of diversity in the fantasy genre. He proposed: 鈥淲hat if Harry Potter went to am HBCU in the South?鈥

鈥淕rowing up, I watched 鈥楾wilight,' I watched 鈥楬unger Games鈥 and 鈥楧ivergent鈥 and 鈥楶ercy Jackson,鈥 which is one of my favorite books. I didn鈥檛 see myself in those stories, and I didn鈥檛 feel seen by them,鈥 said Williams. He is a self-taught playwright, filmmaker and screenwriter.

The post went viral and started a dialogue online, leading Williams down a long road to make good on his idea. He's the first to admit though that the process was not a fairytale.

Williams' 鈥淏lood at the Root,鈥 the first in a three-book deal, arrives in stores Tuesday. Jalyn Hall ("Till", 鈥淎ll American鈥) recorded the audio version. The book follows Malik, a 17-year-old with magical powers who gets accepted into Caiman University, an HBCU with a 鈥淏lackgical culture鈥 and a magic program.

Williams talked to The Associated Press about how his tweet became a novel and his inspirations for 鈥淏lood at the Root.鈥

Answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.

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AP: You sent that... and got a big reaction. Then what happened?

WILLIAMS: I wrote it as a TV pilot. I didn鈥檛 intend it to be a novel. I was sharing (the process) online and people were sending me money with CashApp and Venmo from the U.S., Canada, even New Zealand. They said, 鈥淕o make this a short film.鈥 It was October 2020. Things were shut down. You couldn't buy hand sanitizer. I asked my friends, and we shot this magical short film around LA. We snuck onto the UCLA campus. Sorry, UCLA, but we wanted to film on an actual college campus. That鈥檚 when I realized this story was very special.

I thought I had it all. I thought I had the viral tweet, , I had the script, I had the idea. I thought Hollywood was going to give me a multimillion-dollar offer. I was humbled very quickly with that. No calls were coming. I struggled to get meetings with different production companies and showrunners and studios. Nobody wanted to meet with me. I was really confused and fell into a deep depression.

AP: Is that when you decided to pivot and write the book?

WILLIAMS: I was very sad. There were some days I couldn't even get out of bed. I felt like I failed my friends who risked their health. I felt I failed people who supported it on social media. It was kind of embarrassing. My friend one day said, 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 you turn it into a book?鈥 With everything that was going on in the world and in America, like the civil unrest, I didn't think publishing would want this.

At first, they didn't. I was getting rejections left and right saying, 鈥淲e can't connect with this. It's not marketable.鈥 One of my biggest rejections came on my birthday, Dec. 3, 2022. In late January 2023, I was driving for Uber, and I got a call from my agent who said we got a three-book deal.

AP: Did you scream? Cry?

WILLIAMS: No. I turned the Uber app off and drove home in silence. I went to Ralphs and sat in the parking lot and said, 鈥淚 sold a book. I didn't just sell a book, I sold three.鈥 Then I started screaming and calling everybody.

AP: Talk about the protagonist Malik.

WILLIAMS: I wanted to create a Black boy from Helena, Alabama, which is where I鈥檓 from, who has cool magical powers. It's a coming-of-age story about a 17-year-old who gets to attend this really cool school. He's fun. He makes friends. Friendships, especially as a teenager, are very important. They kind of set you up for life. Malik also connects with his family and ancestry. He's had childhood trauma and hardships, and he's going to make mistakes, but the mistakes don't cost him his life. I want people to get to know him. The way he speaks, the way he thinks. I wanted him to have vulnerability and softness. He extends the love he didn't have as a child to his foster brother. I wanted to create all of that through the lens of magic.

AP: You were also very specific about how you wanted the cover to look.

WILLIAMS: The only time I saw myself on book covers was Christopher Paul Curtis' 鈥淭he Watsons Go to Birmingham 鈥 1963鈥 and "Bud Not Buddy." It was a nonnegotiable with my publishers. I was like, "I need a Black boy on the cover. I don鈥檛 care how we do it. That鈥檚 what I want.鈥 I was a little bold, but it鈥檚 all right. I also wanted him in a hoodie on the cover because, you know, black boys in hoodies are often criminalized. I got what I wanted.

AP: Do you still see the story as a TV series?

WILLIAMS: There are talks about it. I remember going to watch 鈥淭wilight,鈥 as a 6-foot-3 Black kid in Alabama. It was such a cool era to go to the movies and be in this fandom and meet other people that you would never meet. I want to recreate that moment when 鈥淏lack Panther鈥 dropped, and everybody was just buzzing about it. I want to do that for television. I want that for Black kids.

Alicia Rancilio, The Associated Press

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