…it's always nice

…when friends come to visit.

Happy Wednesday! I’ve just realized how very few days there are left in the month of February. Is it just me, or has this all seemed to be going by very fast!? My goal is still to finish my current work in progress this month, well before my agent heads out to the Bologna Book Faire in March. Unfortunately, around two o’clock this morning, some internal spring went boing, and I was wiiide awake, and remained so. This is not good. I’m going to do what I can — no sense in panicking — but my routine is definitely out the window today. And possibly also my spelling/typing skillz.

The plush Totoro on my bookshelf is making me ridiculously happy today. If you don’t know about Totoro (Totori? Totoris? What are they when they’re plural? Or is there only one? I need to find an English translation of the book), I suggest you grab the Hayao Miyazaki/ Studio Ghibli video this weekend. It’s not just the gorgeous animations of the Japanese countryside, the sweet and amusing adventures of the little Japanese family and the happy, bouncy theme song — it’s not just that, but it’s that and more. I still can’t explain why (となりのトトロ)Tonari no Totoro makes me happy, it… just… does.

And on that note, I shall attempt some work!

…it’s always nice

…when friends come to visit.

Happy Wednesday! I’ve just realized how very few days there are left in the month of February. Is it just me, or has this all seemed to be going by very fast!? My goal is still to finish my current work in progress this month, well before my agent heads out to the Bologna Book Faire in March. Unfortunately, around two o’clock this morning, some internal spring went boing, and I was wiiide awake, and remained so. This is not good. I’m going to do what I can — no sense in panicking — but my routine is definitely out the window today. And possibly also my spelling/typing skillz.

The plush Totoro on my bookshelf is making me ridiculously happy today. If you don’t know about Totoro (Totori? Totoris? What are they when they’re plural? Or is there only one? I need to find an English translation of the book), I suggest you grab the Hayao Miyazaki/ Studio Ghibli video this weekend. It’s not just the gorgeous animations of the Japanese countryside, the sweet and amusing adventures of the little Japanese family and the happy, bouncy theme song — it’s not just that, but it’s that and more. I still can’t explain why (となりのトトロ)Tonari no Totoro makes me happy, it… just… does.

And on that note, I shall attempt some work!

Cybils, Censorship, and Shunning

And they’re out! The winners of the Cybils Awards for 2008 have been chosen, and congratulations to all!

It was really interesting to be a judge for the Cybils instead of serving on a nominating committee — it takes a different kind of reading and booktalking to judge a book by its merits, instead of just your own personal opinion. This type of judgment is what I always assumed librarians used in choosing books to stock their library shelves.

Unfortunately, a recent School Library Journal “Talkback” article proved that idealistic theory wrong, at least about 70% of school librarians. Many of those polled quietly refuse to purchase books in order to avoid static and friction with parents, community members, school administration and students.

The example they use of that kind of insidious avoidance is Barry Lyga’s Boy Toy, which was a 2007 Cybils winner for YA fiction, and has received tons of other critical acclaim. It’s an empathetic treatment of a sensationalized media event, and tells the story of of a twelve-year-old student’s affair with his teacher. This obviously isn’t a light-hearted story, but it deals in reality. Boy Toy discusses something which makes people feel completely creeped-out uncomfortable. And many, many school librarians, instead of having it on hand — or even in the reference section — for their kids to read and know about … preferred to pretend it didn’t exist.

Apparently this is the same for many books — those that have gay, lesbian and transgendered characters, those which have sex or violence, or just what some term “darkness” and/or the death of pets (!?). Because school librarians have patrons who are mostly kids, because they have school administrations and constituents to please, because they don’t want to hear from screeching parents, they choose to be conservative and prudent. 70% of the librarians polled take on the position of being gatekeepers, and refuse to purchase what they fear will be controversial books.

Often, we frown at the idea of librarians censoring children’s reading choices — telling them, “No, that’s not a book you’re ready for,” is upsetting to a lot of people. But not even buying the book so it’s on their library shelves…?

Writers have to jump through a lot of hoops — a lot of hoops — in order to get published. Personally, my work has to meet my agent’s approval so I don’t embarrass him in front of the editors and publishers he approaches. My work has to meet my editor’s approval, so that she can take it to editorial meetings, and get the support of the house for the money and time which is going to be spent on me and my work. Then there’s all the splendid ranks of copy editors, fact-checkers, and the like. Before all of that, there’s my writing group, and my own internal editor.

It takes a lot to turn an idea into a manuscript and into a published book. It seems a shame to think after all of the struggle and angst that goes into producing an excellent work, to have someone else decide that they can just …shun it, and pretend that it doesn’t exist, and to have that shunning be like the ripples that go throughout a still pond when a stone is dropped — wow. What if this happens to someone I know?

What if this happens to me?

What can an author do?

As a writer, I’d hate to try and do my job from a position of fear of what others think — despite the fact that fear is what writers struggle with every time they write.

It would be even worse not to be able to get past that fear, and to let it run things.

Lucky 13th

The Sand Canyon Review @ Crafton Hills College is now accepting submissions for their 2009 issue. Please keep in mind the following guidelines:

– All work must have your name, address and phone number attached to the piece.
– Written work may be no longer than 10 pages in length.
– Poetry must be limited to 40 lines.
– All artwork is limited to 3 entries per person.

Submit your work to SCRsubmissions@gmail.com, subject header: SCR submissions

The city is swimming in glitter (seriously: someone dropped about a half pound in the entryway, and it’s been tracked up and down the whole building) and all the hoochies and lonelyhearts are out in their micro-minis and clunky big shoes. Too bad it’s pouring out, and their hair is soon going to be a raveled mass of sticky hairspray and ick, but c’est la vie. One for the road, then, and happy hunting, everyone.

Superbly Situated

by Robert Hershon

you politely ask me not to die and i promise not to
right from the beginning—a relationship based on
good sense and thoughtfulness in little things

i would like to be loved for such simple attainments
as breathing regularly and not falling down too often
or because my eyes are brown or my father left-handed

and to be on the safe side i wouldn’t mind if somehow
i became entangled in your perception of admirable objects
so you might say to yourself: i have recently noticed

how superbly situated the empire state building is
how it looms up suddenly behind cemeteries and rivers
so far away you could touch it—therefore i love you

part of me fears that some moron is already plotting
to tear down the empire state building and replace it
with a block of staten island mother/daughter houses

just as part of me fears that if you love me for my cleanliness
i will grow filthy if you admire my elegant clothes

i’ll start wearing shirts with sailboats on them

but i have decided to become a public beach an opera house
a regularly scheduled flight—something that can’t help being
in the right place at the right time—come take your seat

we’ll raise the curtain fill the house start the engines
fly off into the sunrise, the spire of the empire state
the last sight on the horizon as the earth begins to curve


Robert Herson, “Superbly Situated” from How to Ride on the Woodlawn Express. Copyright © 1985 by Robert Hershon.

Cold Heart, Strong Samurai

I feel like I’m just being immersed in words this month, which is a good thing, since I’m also being intermittently immersed in rain. At the moment, though, snow is falling, or maybe sleet, but it’s okay, I keep telling myself. I have no place to go, and nothing in particular to do this weekend. Most people would consider that to be boring, but with the wet and the muck outside, and the books inside, I see this to be a Really Great Thing.

I copied down this poem because… it’s not me. I think there’s a teensy riot grrl screeching mouse-like in my inner core. I wish this were me. Maybe it’s kind of like why young readers like fantasy literature; we wish to be powerful. If we were vampires, we’d be up all night, scare the crap out of the establishment, take insane risks with sunrise, be brilliantly sexy and of course — live forever. If we were witches, it’d be the same, except we’d have more power than to just eat people. And hey, if we had dragons…

So, I will muse further on my samurai; hard warriors with no time for anything but discipline and rules. As I said: so not me. But I like this poem anyway.

Samurai Song

           — by Robert Pinsky

When I had no roof I made

Audacity my roof. When I had

No supper my eyes dined.

When I had no eyes I listened.

When I had no ears I thought.

When I had no thought I waited.

When I had no father I made

Care my father. When I had

No mother I embraced order.

When I had no friend I made

Quiet my friend. When I had no

Enemy I opposed my body.

When I had no temple I made

My voice my temple. I have

No priest, my tongue is my choir.

When I have no means fortune

Is my means. When I have

Nothing, death will be my fortune.

Need is my tactic, detachment

Is my strategy. When I had

No lover I courted my sleep.

Listen to the author read this brilliant, cold poem and others here.

Why do I love this poem (other than the fact that Stephen Colbert said I should)? Its appeal to my inner warrior is strong, and it lures me into the idea that I can do something about everything. I can finesse the whole world. Or, barring that option, I can detach from it, and ignore it.

Which is a sort of power, too.

Maybe this is a love poem, to the self.

(I am strong. I am invincible.
I am, I am, I am.)


Poetry Friday is at Big A, little a. Thanks for visiting.

A 125-Page Mind

Most people don’t have a clear idea where they’re going or how many pages they’ll need when writing a story. Not Betsy Byars. She has the perfect brain for MG fiction, the 125 page mind.

“Asked whether she ever thought about writing books for adults, Byars simply replied: ‘I became aware over the years of writing, that I had a 125 page mind … With 125 pages, I knew what I was doing, what I needed to do, where the climax should be, etc.'”

Not all the rest of us are that fortunate!

Still – I’m on p. 248 of the current work in progress, so I know we’re going to see the end here sometime soon. Meanwhile, I think I will call this website officially finished! Thanks to all of those who assisted.

Poetry Friday: Counting Games


Today’s Poetry Friday is an oldie-but-goodie I posted ages ago. It’s one of my favorite types of poetry, the spontaneous playground sort.


Traditional Children’s “Counting Out” rhymes.

Inter mitzy titzy tool
ira dira dominu
oker poker dominoker
out goes you

Intery mintery cutery corn
apple seed and briar thorn
wire briar limber lock
five geese in a flock
sit and sing by a spring
O U T and in again

When I went up the apple tree,
All the apples fell on me,
Bake a pudding, bake a pie,
Did you ever tell a lie?
Yes, you did,
You know you did,
You broke your mother’s teapot lid,
L-I-D spells “lid”
And out goes you!

Monkey, Monkey, bottle of beer,
How many monkeys are there here?
One is far, one is near,
And you are the one
Who is out, my dear.

Wire, briar, limberlock,
Three geese in a flock,
One flew east, one flew west,
One flew over the cuckoo’s nest.
The clock fell down,
The mouse ran around,
Scared all the people in the town—
And out goes she
With a dirty dishrag
On her knee!

– Author unknown

I ran across these and loved them, though I must say I don’t know to whose tradition they belong. I keep an ear out for counting rhymes because they always carry some sort of regional flavor that belongs uniquely to that neighborhood, that school district or that time. ‘Ol’ Mary Mac, all dressed in black, with silver buttons all down her back,’ asks her mother in one song for fifteen cents to “see the elephants jump the fence.” Elsewhere she wants to see “the presidents.” (Fence-jumping elephants, however, infinitely more exciting back in the day. From the number of people crowding the Capitol Mall last month, I’d say presidents are on the upswing again.)

One of my favorite from older years — is the chemistry rhyme, definitely started in a school somewhere:

Johnny had a little drink
But Johnny drinks no more
Because what he thought was H2O
Was H2SO4
.

You will now never forget the formula for sulfuric acid, will you?

Childhood. Strange days of spontaneous, playground poetry.

I remember my sisters and I weeping with laughter over my father’s childhood hide-and-seek counting chant, “Three, six, nine, the goose drank wine, the monkey chewed tobacco by the streetcar line…” and then hearing the words in a reggae song years later (not, sadly, followed by the shout, “Are ya’ll hid?”). We were sure he’d made that up, but apparently a Pensacola childhood is… like a reggae song? Who knows. Who knows…

There are more piquant and unexpected pleasures at Poetry Friday, hosted for the very first time at Elaine at Wild Rose Reader. Happy weekend to you, may you, in some way, rediscover a portion of childhood…

Thinking of Molly


Two years ago today, my all-time favorite columnist, Molly Ivins, died of cancer. She wrote about politics, which isn’t something I like to talk about much, but she wrote truthfully about life and she was funny and brave and a shoot-from-the-hip type of Texan whom I really respected.

She once wrote,“I don’t have any children, so I’ve decided to claim all the future freedom-fighters and hell-raisers as my kin.”

I hope someday to be, in my own small way, enough of a hell-raiser (in a polite, self-conscious way) to be counted as kin. Until then, may we all stay safe, and choose hope over fear. May we someday leave aside our overwhelming fear for our safety, lest we scare ourselves to death.

What You See Is –?


“What you see is what you get.” It’s a phrase that means that what you’re looking at is all that’s there — you can take it for its face value.

Is that ever true of a person?

Soprano Anne Wiggins Brown was born on August 9, 1912, in Baltimore, Maryland. She was the great-granddaughter of a slave. Her ethnic background was a jumble of Cherokee, Creole, Scottish and African, and her first love was music. She and her three sisters sang and were involved in musical theater in their segregated neighborhood.

There wasn’t any future in that, however, for an African-American, and so after getting turned down for music schools in the area, Anne went to teacher’s college. But she still loved music, and took voice lessons with a woman from Julliard, the famous music school. Anne became the first African American to win Julliard’s prestigious Margaret McGill scholarship, and she was in.

Do I need to tell you that she had a chance to audition for Ira Gershwin? And she was given a part in a jazz musical called Porgy, but because of her input the name was later changed to Porgy & Bess — because she was such an amazing Bess?

Yet, Anne wasn’t allowed to perform in some theaters — and she, in turn, refused to perform in theaters which were segregated. She finally went overseas in 1946, like so many other famous African American artists and musicians. It was just too hard to stay in her own country.

In Sherri L. Smith’s Flygirl, Ida Mae didn’t ever stop being an African American, but she chose to live as a Caucasian person, in order to be treated as part of her own country. To her mind, what was seen wasn’t worth more than the truth, but what people saw was able to give her what she wanted, in part.

What’s worth passing for? What’s not? Read our conversation with author Sherri L. Smith, and drop us a comment.


Also, if you’re not stopping by The Brown Bookshelf this month, you’re missing some great authors and illustrators. Today, check out Nicole Tadgell, who recently illustrated the picture book No Mush Today.

Guest Blogger Sherri L. Smith: On Passing & Identity

Today we welcome back young adult writer Sherri L. Smith to Finding Wonderland! Sherri is the author of Lucy the Giant, a novel about a tall girl from the immense state of Alaska who tries to lose herself and her past in the wilds — and finds out what it means to have someone care enough to find you. Lucy’s story was Sherri’s first novel, and one of our all-time favorite Under Radar Recommendations.

Sherri’s other novels include the 2009 Louisiana Young Readers’ Choice Award nominee, Sparrow, and last summer’s MG novel, Hot, Sour, Salty, Sweet. This month we celebrate Sherri’s newest release, Flygirl, which hit bookstores just last week, and received a starred review from Booklist.

~~~

Passing. People of one ancestry or ethnic group being able to pass for another. Where does the phrase even come from? Once upon a time in the days of slavery, African American slaves who traveled away from their owners were required show passes to anyone who asked for them, to assure that they were on legitimate business. People who were not questioned, who were light enough, due to the blending of their genetics with those of the master’s family, were said to be able to “pass.” And from a long ago and ugly place we come up with a word that is alive and well today.

When Sherri told us the topic of her book, we gave a little twitch. Passing — is a loaded word, and not really a topic that gets talked about much in “polite society.” And certainly not in a novel for young adults!

Obviously, “passing” was a great big deal in the Jim Crow days, because African Americans were legally not allowed to do a whole bunch of things. People anxiously protected the status quo because most of the time, society prefers to tell us who we are, instead of letting us decide for themselves, so that there’s some kind of stability. The full force of the law came down on those who tried to rock the boat and choose for themselves. It could have cost Ida Mae her life to pass for white — but let me not give away any spoilers! Instead, let’s let Sherri talk!


When Tadmack and Aquafortis invited me back to Finding Wonderland, we exchanged more than a few emails geeking out over the shared backdrop of our latest novels—my Flygirl and Tadmack’s forthcoming Mare’s War are both set during World War II with African American heroines. We commiserated over the amount of research required, and what it was like to imagine the experience of a black woman in a Jim Crow world, never mind a segregated military. What we discovered is that we could go on for hours talking about race and identity. What it means to be a woman in a man’s world, what it means to be a black person in a white landscape. And it got me thinking about what our characters had to give up in order to be who they become during the course of our novels.

In Flygirl, Ida Mae Jones is a young black woman, the daughter of farmers, who learns to fly on her daddy’s crop duster. When the war comes, her brother enlists, and she finds herself, in a time of rationed gasoline, faced with the chance to fly again by volunteering for the Womens Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). This was a non-military program that trained women to fly Army planes in the United States—everything from towing targets for artillery training, to ferrying and testing new planes to be shipped overseas—all in order to “free a man to fight,” as the propaganda posters said. The catch is a big one, though—no blacks allowed. Ida Mae, thanks to her father’s side of the family, is light-skinned enough to pass for white. Her mother warns her against such a path—it could cost her her safety if she is found out, and her family if she wishes to stay on the “white” side of life. But Ida is young. She can only think of the immediate future, of a need to do something to help end the war. And so she leaves her mother, her grandfather, and her little brother behind. She changes the way she talks, the things she says, and she becomes, in all outward appearances, a new woman. A white woman.

T: This is such a great hook to the story – readers are interested already on many levels. Can she do it? Is it right to do it? Will she get caught? Perhaps for an African American reader, there’s an even greater drama. This is The Betrayal. This is the thing so many people are taught is The Great Evil. In stories passed down, in books, in old, old movies, this is what is known: you don’t “act White” you don’t “talk White;” you’ve got to “represent,” even if you have no clear idea what any of that is supposed to mean. The court of public opinion is in session, and if you’re not careful, you may find yourself held in contempt. But to choose to accept that part of her ethnicity that is not African American, and to choose to embrace that part… Wow. That is unimaginably heavy, indeed, at least for that time period.

Nowadays, we’re okay with letting, say, the sitting president of the country choose to identify with a specific part of his ethnic identity.

Right?

AF: This IS a great hook into a story with a provocative theme—one that has the potential of making readers of any ethnicity think more deeply about our history and about what a struggle it can be to have to make a deliberate choice about how we portray ourselves to the world.

In thinking about it further, I strongly feel we need stories like this, stories that help us not to forget the more painful parts of our racial history, or, to paraphrase what George Santayana said, we might risk repeating it in some less flagrant but still insidious way—especially at a time that, some opine, is somehow “post-racial.” The idea, maybe, is to go forward aware of our histories, regardless of whether we choose to “represent” or not, whether we identify with one history or another.

It’s easy to leave where you come from. Just jump a car, hop on a bus or an airplane with a one way ticket and never go back. It might be hard. You might miss it, but once you’re gone, you’re gone. How, on the other hand, do you leave behind who you come from? The fact that you have your mother’s smile, and her way of shaking a finger when you’re angry. The way you walk like your dad, shoulders squared against the world, but a roll in your step like you’re always on vacation. How do you change or deny the fact that you and your grandmother both love to dance? How do you forget that knock-knock jokes always make you and your little brother laugh? I don’t think you can leave those parts of yourself behind. To do so is an act of great violence. It’s suicide. Self-immolation. Or, more precisely, it is surgery. Sharp, exacting, and without anesthesia.

T: It’s erasing yourself.

AF: Yet don’t we all want to exist on our own terms, independent of that “who,” that “where,” at the same time that we’re part of them? How much of that self-separation is a mask, an illusion?

I suppose at first that the rewards this surgical removal of self gains you act as a painkiller of sorts. The euphoria you feel breezing past the “members only” signs. The knowledge that you sit at the big table now, that you are looking out of the windows of the same big houses you used to stare into so longingly. You have become the face on the movie screen. That might ease or mask your pain.

But it must wear off. Everything does. Can it console you in the middle of the night when all you want is your mother’s cool hand on your fevered brow, when you are sick and feel hopeless and alone? You have money now, position, power. You can hire a chef to make the same soup your mother would have made you. You can even pay someone to sing the same songs to you. But would the recipe, would the lyrics give you away? You have traded a child’s solace for your new position. And you can never trade it back. Not evenly. Not equally. You might lose your new role one day, but the old one is definitely gone forever.

T: Well, to a certain extent, every one of us who leaves home to grow up walks away from a place, a role, a set of clothes that has grown too small and too confining. We lose our place because we become too big for it – we allow ourselves to grow. But if we’ve chosen to grow in the direction of the dominant culture, that’s so different, because we have chosen. But does that always mean that there would be no place for us within the minority? I guess historically, the answer would be… yes.

AF: And what if even the less visible, but no less fundamental, choices of identity—your aspirations, your goals, the ideas you hold most dear—also separate you from where you came from? What if the assumptions and judgments of your family, of the culture you chose to leave, build an invisible wall just as much as the choices you’ve made?

On the flipside, how do you forgive someone who has traded your love for brighter lights? You might. If it’s your child, you might forgive them anything. If it’s your friend, you might take pity when they come home. But how do you forgive yourself, if you are the one who has crossed the line? I cannot imagine. And imagination is my trade.

T: The question few people ask is whether or not there needs to be forgiveness — or, whether or not there was any wrong done except in the legal sense, during the Jim Crow era. The sense of moral outrage that people had over this was, in part perhaps because there was a Line, a broad line between the races that strictly divided ‘have’ from ‘have not’ and ‘can’ from ‘cannot.’ Would people truly have issue with someone “acting White” or “choosing White” if there were not still social and monetary consequences for doing so? Does the privilege of the majority actually exist without the subjugation of the minority — I mean, isn’t deciding one group of people is better basically a game you play, based on who you decide not to like? It’s very much like a playground game, with no real right/wrong, rhyme/reason, and when the whistle blows, the reality of the game dissolves. Which brings up the question of if there is a kind of moral obligation for a person who can go either way to embrace the minority culture, or else be considered a bad person?

AF: Another question: If you embrace one of your cultures, does it automatically entail a denial of the other(s)? I believe we have a tendency to assume that’s still so, because in previous eras—e.g., in the Jim Crow era—it did mean that in a very real way. But now, the idea of the “dominant culture” is a little more complicated than simply “white culture.” Maybe that means there’s some room for variation, and room to keep what once had to be denied.

My mother passed away a little over a year ago, and my father passed just this last November. More than ever, I am constantly reminded of the pieces of them that make the whole of me. Why I read what I read, why I speak in the cadence I do. Who gave me that favorite sweater—what did they know about me that would make it my favorite? Why I feel about the world the way I do. Some of it is unique to me, I suppose, but so much of it is given to me by my parents, and their parents and so on. Our personalities are our inheritance. So, then, how do you walk away from who you come from when they are encoded in your DNA? If Ida Mae marries a white man, will she still worry that their first child’s skin will be dark like her mother’s, or her brothers’? Will the baby’s heritage show itself in the genes? Or just in a familiar smile, a way of laughing that twists Ida’s heart because it sounds like the brother she left behind?

To always be afraid that some of your “self” might be showing—what kind of a life is that? It’s a life so many people have lived, by choice or by necessity. I know at least two people who discovered only after their mothers’ funerals, that their mothers had been secretly Jewish. I know a boy whose oldest sister is in fact his mother. A charade that the entire family played for years. I only learned the truth when the boy was whining one day and called his sister “Mommy.” The middle sister, my friend, pulled me aside later to explain. And it was never mentioned again. And then there was the former acquaintance who believed himself to be securely in the closet, unable to remember the drunken cocktail hour during which he outed himself (in very unfortunate language) to his bosses. (It did not matter to them that he was gay, but the manner in which he told them… and the entire bar, left something to be desired.)

T: That is such a tough way to be outed — when you stumble and do it to yourself. A woman I knew had a child with a man of Mediterranean ancestry, and did not let that secret go until her son had children of his own, and her grandchildren had a genetic disorder common to people of Mediterranean ancestry… there really is no way to walk away from who you are, when it is encoded into your DNA. And even if the secret is mostly kept, when it is discovered, that same explosion occurs sometimes, as those who thought they had a right to know the secret of your true self feel ultimately betrayed.

What does it cost to be “sister” to your son or your nephew? What does it take to deny that you ever gave birth? What does it mean to hide your faith, your heritage because the people you move among, work with, the people you marry might despise you if they knew the truth? Clearly, for at least one of the above people, the pressure was too much, and the secret burst forth like steam erupting from an overheated engine. Imagine, then, the pain of holding the truth in for the rest of your life.

AF: It’s quite interesting living where I do, in a rather large town that still, in many ways, retains many small-town characteristics. There are still milieus where I keep quiet about the Pakistani heritage I get from my father—especially over the past eight years—and about the fact that, yes, he is a Muslim. And I feel like, on a day-to-day basis, I AM passing—for somebody Latina, maybe, or Mediterranean, or just somebody with a really dark tan. Being mixed does mean that sometimes, even if you don’t mean to, you’re hiding something about yourself simply because it’s not immediately apparent.

Now, some of you are thinking, “I could never do such a thing.” Those of us who believe we are too righteous, too proud, too much our selves to pass as anything other — what are we lying about? How are we passing?

Some days, I’ll walk down Rodeo Drive and put my nose in the air, walk into a shop like I own the place because, for all the shopkeepers know, I’m a millionaire. Sometimes I pretend I’m waiting for someone because I don’t want to look like I’m alone at the bus stop as the sun goes down. And once, in college, I allowed a friend to tell people I was in a recovering alcoholic because I didn’t want to drink at a party and everyone was so insistent that I should. It wasn’t my idea, but I didn’t deny it once it was said. Small transgressions? Maybe. Not with the weight of cost that racial, sexual or religious passing implies, perhaps, but it gives a taste. The frisson in the spine, the tiny terror of being found out. The fear of being discovered a fraud by either side of the line you’ve crossed. (The rehab rumor earned me whispers and sympathetic nods—and a sense of guilt. I did not drink in college—it would be like falling off the wagon and suddenly I found I had an example to set.)

Now imagine that that terror never leaves. That it grows, that it wraps itself around the base of your brain and calls it home to stay. It can’t unmake who you come from, only force you to suppress it time and time again. And then, I wonder, do you eventually suffocate? Or does only the part of you, the secret, the offending detail, die?


T: A difficult and poignant question, which reminds me of another question asked by the poet Langston Hughes. “What happens to a dream deferred?”

Keeping who we truly are a secret must cripple in so many, many other ways. Passing for reasons of race, gender, class, or ethnicity is historically depicted tragically in literature and film — and nowadays, it’s played in an exaggerated way for laughs, but few people explore it seriously, and even fewer in YA literature. Sherri, I really appreciate that you kind of climbed out there on a limb and wrote about this — from a historical perspective, which allows us to both consider our distance from the past, and to think about our identity within the context of our own times.

AF: Yes–and we’re honored that you chose to stop by and share your thoughts with us. Thanks!!

A discussion guide for Flygirl is available on Sherri’s website.


Continue on the Flygirl: Mostly Virtual Blog Tour!
~~~

Read Sherri’s funny interview at The Five Randoms,
Find out what she’s looking forward to this month at Bildungsroman,
Next Monday, stop by The YA YA YAs for a thoughtful Q&A, and then wind up the tour with Shelf Elf on the 13th.

After that, Sherri’s off to Hedgebrook, for two weeks with no phone, no worries, and someone else to make the coffee. Sounds like a well-earned writing retreat to us! Congratulations!