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Instead of choosing books based on the color of the author's skin, a better goal would be something like, "I will only read books written ABOUT characters or settings that offer a peek into different cultural and/or socioeconomic environments because I'm tired of reading books that revolve around middle class western-Europeans."
Here, though, you run into the problem of white authors generally being given more credit for writing PoC than PoC authors themselves. While I always want to see more PoC represented in fiction, the last thing I want is for it to be at the expense of actual, living PoC! Given how underrepresented PoC are in publishing-land, I think there's a lot to be said for supporting PoC authors regardless of the ethnicity of their characters.
The only 'resolution' I would make regarding books I intend to read would be to read the books that look interesting/entertaining to me regardless of who wrote them.
That's really all that matters to me.
Practically everyone reads that way. The problem is that all of us have subconscious biases (and yeah, white people probably more so than others). If I'd looked at the percentage of white authors/characters vs. PoC authors/characters in the books I read a couple of years ago, it would've been vastly, hugely disproportionately white. (And straight, and cis, and able-bodied.) Was that a conscious decision? Not at all.
This year, I thought I'd made a more concerted effort to branch out. At the end of the year, out of curiosity, I tallied up the numbers, and I was surprised at how skewed the percentages still were. It's really messed up how we're so programmed to see white/straight/etc. as Normal and everything else as Other that it takes such an effort and conscious thought to try to make sure you're not subconsciously snubbing huge swathes of people who are underrepresented and badly represented as is.
So, yeah, making conscious decisions to read more books by X or about Y results in supporting an underrepresented group of authors, thus helping them gain a much-needed stronger foothold in publishing, and being exposed to really, really good books you might have otherwise missed out on without even realizing it.