“I’m a well-known writer of women’s fiction. I want to incorporate black characters into my books. How does a white woman write black women correctly? For example, is it disrespectful to have a black woman have a bit of a thing for white men? What’s the best way to introduce a black female character in a book? Do I write something like, ‘Despite being African American, Carissa found blond men attractive’? Or something like, ‘Right or wrong, Carissa loved white boys and had picked one out to take home with her’?
“There’s a sad dearth of people of color in romantic fiction. I doubt it’s racism. I think it’s mainly because so many white writers, like me, simply don’t know how to get it right, so we stay in our comfort zone. Any advice?” — Too White to Write?
If, by saying you want to write black women “correctly,” you mean “in a way that’s guaranteed not to inspire any complaints, constructive critiques or outright criticism,” you should probably just stick to your genre’s safely monochromatic cast of characters.