Two years after race-faker Rachel Dolezal was exposed for living secretly as a black woman, she insists in her new memoir that she did nothing wrong.

The 39-year-old made international headlines after her parents, Larry and Ruthanne, revealed she was a white woman pretending to be black.

She resigned from her post as the Spokane, Washington, NAACP leader and also lost her job as an adjunct instructor at Eastern Washington University.

Dolezal later conceded that she 'was biologically born white to white parents', and compared herself to Caitlyn Jenner, claiming race is 'not coded in your DNA' and should be viewed like gender or religion.

Last year, she announced the release of her memoir, In Full Color, on Instagram. The book is set to be published next month.

Two years after race-faker Rachel Dolezal (pictured) was exposed for living secretly as a black woman, she insists in her new memoir that she did nothing wrong

Her book proposal was shopped to more than 30 publishers before she landed a deal with independent publisher BenBella.

In an interview with The Guardian, Dolezal said: 'This is obviously an issue a lot of people want to say things about. And it needs to be talked about, so it's kind of helpful to create a punching bag.

'There's nobody saying, 'Well, that's racist if you say that about Rachel', or 'That's sexist if you say that about Rachel.'

In Full Color: Her book proposal was shopped to more than 30 publishers before she landed a deal with independent publisher BenBella

'There's no protected class for me. I'm this generic, ambiguous scapegoat for white people to call me a race traitor and take out their hostility on. And I'm a target for anger and pain about white people from the black community. It's like I am the worst of all these worlds,' Dolezal told the Guardian.

Dolezal told the newspaper that she is currently jobless and feeding her family with food stamps.

Her friend reportedly helped her pay two months worth of rent and she said she expects to be homeless.

Dolezal said she has applied for more than 100 jobs, including a position at the university where she used to teach, but no one will hire her.

The only work she has been offered is reality TV, and porn.

'Right now the only place that I feel understood and completely accepted is with my kids and my sister,' Dolezal told the Guardian.

She says she has very few friends and despite changing her name on her legal documents, she is still recognized wherever she goes.

But her memoir, In Full Color: Finding My Place In A Black And White World will be published in March.

Dolezal said she wrote the book because she wanted to 'set the record straight' to both the black and white communities that felt as if she had wronged them.

Dolezal said she wrote the book because she wanted to 'set the record straight' to both the black and white communities. She also said she wanted to 'open up this dialogue about race and identity, and to just encourage people to be exactly who they are'

The book is described as the story of Dolezal's (center) path from being a child of white Evangelical parents to 'an NAACP chapter president and respected educator and activist who identified as black'

She also said she wanted to 'open up this dialogue about race and identity, and to just encourage people to be exactly who they are'.

The book is described as the story of Dolezal's path from being a child of white Evangelical parents to 'an NAACP chapter president and respected educator and activist who identified as black'.

Dolezal will explore the 'deep emotional bond' she developed with her four adopted black siblings and the 'sense of belonging she felt while living in black communities', according to the synopsis.

The $15 hardcover book, which is 256 pages, will also discuss 'the discrimination' Dolezal claims to have suffered 'while living as a black woman'.

'Her story is nuanced and complex, and in the process of telling it, she forces us to consider race in an entirely new light,' the synopsis concludes.

'Not as a biological imperative, but as a function of the experience we have, the culture we embrace, and, ultimately, the identity we choose.'

Since the scandal, Dolezal has given birth to her third child, a boy named Langston Attickus Dolezal.