"Goodbye Cruel World…" Is Not An Option

“You’re better off alive, no matter how messed up you think you might be right now. And you’re better off alive no matter how mean someone is being to you. You are simply better off alive than dead—no matter who or what you are, no matter who or what you love, and no matter what you do. Just don’t be mean. Being mean never works. Never. So that’s the only rule I can think of that’s worth following in life: don’t be mean. Yes, you can be mean to yourself if that’s what’s going to keep you alive. I’m sorry if that’s happening to you. But keep in mind that there are alternatives that hurt a lot less, and I hope you find one soon. Do what you have to do, and stay alive because it gets better. I promise. xoxo Kate”


I constantly belittle people who comment upon books without having read them, butReyhan Harmanci’s book review in the Chronicle this morning of Hello Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks & Other Outlaws has given me some food for thought. Written by trans-gendered author and activist Kate Bornstein, the book takes a dark and serious topic and enters into its darkness with the intent of leavening it with humor, compassion and empathy.

Bornstein knows what it’s like to be not quite like everyone else. She was born a boy who didn’t feel like a boy, and it took a long journey to get to a gender in which she feels comfortable. The book was initially targeted toward lesbian/gay/bi/trans/queer teens, but the content applies to any teen who has ever experienced a profound sense of depression and dark thoughts. That being said, some of the 101 Alternatives Bornstein offers are bluntly controversial. Harmanci was disconcerted to see cutting brought up as a viable option. Bornstein accepts that alternatives like “Get laid. Please,” “Experiment on animals and small children” “Make it bleed” or “Tell a lie” might not be what a parent would find acceptable from their child. While some of these are meant playfully, others are not. Yet, Bornstein insists if the alterantive is suicide… isn’t “unacceptable” behavior preferable?

Hmm.

I look forward to the comments of anyone who has read this book – would you reccomend it to a teen? The mini-version, which includes a Get Out of Hell Free card, seems full of good wishes and love from a person who has already been there. Whatever else this book might be, it does address a timely issue in an accessible, thoughtful way.

Classics & Cereal Boxes: A quiet morning rant

Good grief, not again. Yet another over-educated and under-intelligent soul is going off on the reading habits of American children and young adults. Now it’s summer reading lists they’re disparaging… we’re not spending enough time on the classics, and we’re turning out a nation of cereal-box readers. Oh, no, not enough classics?!! Who, tell me who will save the children!?

(FYI, there’s some really interesting stuff on the back of cereal boxes. And on Silk cartons. And inevitably reading something of INTEREST to you, even on the back of a box of cereal, can spark you to do a little research on your own… as is intended.)

This is NOT a new conversation. Understand, I’m coming from the rather cranky point-of-view of someone whose growing up literary investigations were closely monitored and usually curtailed. However, as I understand it for most people, summer reading is out-of-school reading, which therefore is a.) rare (thus the Wall Street Journal’s amusing turn of phrase “seasonal illiteracy”), and b.) is therefore a green light to read whatever you jolly well please, because you’re READING, which brings us back to our first reason. Schools and libraries have all sorts of fun programs surrounding summer reading, and encourage people to read — anything, everything. Books. Graphic novels. Encyclopedias. ANYTHING. And here the Journal is complaining because no one is pushing 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Don’t those people normally just concentrate on making money? I suggest they get back to that and leave the librarians alone.

How tired I am of people moaning on about the Classics. Do we not yet realize that the so-called ‘canon’ is made up of a.) old b.) Caucasian and c.) male writers and characters, to a large degree? The difficult language and lengthy descriptions of a bygone world may not be as interesting first off to a young person. We can be frustrated with that, but it’s the truth. It takes time and education to appreciate things outside of our milieu. Young adult readers who don’t naturally gravitate those directions can be guided into them — in school. Maybe they’re just not asking for that type of encouragement during the summer, but if they’re asking, librarians still exist and are there to help. Meanwhile, I advocate a more multicultural and balanced approach where Sandra Cisneros can exist alongside Ralph Waldo Ellison and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Yes, older books are good. But it doesn’t necessarily follow that newer books are bad. Relegating Edward Bloor’s Tangerine to the category of some lightweight ‘sports book’ is to woefully misunderstand the subtleties of modern YA fiction, and what it can accomplish. (Moreover, it is to obviously admit that you’re commenting on it, and have never read it. Shame, Wall Street Journal. Shame.)

Yes, I read The Scarlet Pimpernel the summer when I was twelve, and then went on to read A Tale of Two Cities because it seemed kind of related. Please note that after that, I reread Anne of Green Gables, a book the Journal would say had “a soap opera plot,” because my brain needed a break. Adults have to acknowledge that a kid moves forward at a kid’s pace, not an adult pace. There will be time for Ahab and the whale, for feisty Jo and her insipid sisters, for Stephen Crane and Frederick Douglass, and all the others. Life is long. Childhood is too freaking short.

(Thanks to Jen Robinson’s Book Page for pointing out both the Journal article as well as Shannon Hale’s good rant.)

After this, I REALLY will get to work. Really.

Someone asked me this morning, in reference to my Blog Against Racism comments, if I’d ever read any Octavia Butler, and after I’d finished waxing poetic and mopping my eyes and explaining that I’d named a character in my latest novel after her (a high honor, from me), I pointed them to her Wiki site. Looking there myself I found that a memorial scholarship has been created in her name.

I never even knew she was a MacArthur Fellow! Shows how much you care about a writer’s honors if they write good books.

I always thought I’d one day get to meet her…
I hope she knew how loved she was.

Return to Edit Hell: The Sequel

I have received my editorial letter from Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers! Huzzah! I should be working, but I’m not! Again, huzzah!
(Apparently procrastination among writers is catching…)
Let the time-wasting be unconfined! On with the dance!

Kudos to Fuse #8 for pointing out my newest timewaster site: Book-A-Minute, which cheerfully and succinctly ultra-condenses everything you’ve not got the time to read. My favorite example so far?

The Collected Works of Anne McCaffrey
———————————————–

Ultra-Condensed by Christina Carlson

Female Lead
I secretly love Male Lead. He must never know.
Male Lead
I secretly love Female Lead. She must never know.
(They find out.)

THE END

Which pretty much sums up, with deep and painful irony, everything our Anne has ever written, and made me snort my tea. Quel amusant.

Have you ever wondered how a book makes the cut to become part of the literary canon? I have, and apparently some teachers have, too. The Miami Herald this weekend discussed what makes a classic in children’s books — one reader thinks Catcher in the Rye isn’t a classic, and a classics professor from the University of Miami names Winnie-the-Pooh in favor of the Potter epics as classic literature. Classics, by Professor Phillip A. Russo’s lights, have to be old in order to be classics. Catcher isn’t yet old enough, but it will get there. Quoting 18th century author Samuel Johnson, who, when writing about Shakespeare 150 years after his death said that “length of duration and continuance of esteem” are the only earmarks of a classic, Russo doesn’t even yet include Joyce, Faulkner or Hemingway in that category.

I don’t really adore Catcher; Holden Caufield gets on my nerves. But Holden Caufield did something for millions of people who read it; it touched a nerve, it shaped a generation of outbursts and rebellious thinking for many. The impact of a novel has got to be worth something. (Thanks again to Fuse #8 for this find.)

And speaking of guys with impact, Cool Boys are being collected on Jen Robinson’s Book Page. Final list is Friday, so stay tuned for the results, and if you have a suggestion, make yours today! Ooh, and one more new time-waster: I keep forgetting to tell you to take the Teen Angst Novel Quiz. I took it, and found out that I am a book I haven’t read yet. Yay!


What Teen Angst Novel are You? – funny, lots of results, with pix, from the author of The Boyfriend List and Fly on the Wall


PREP, by Curtis Sittenfeld. Thought-provoking, class-conscious, analytical, smartly observant. Sometimes irritating. Go read it. It’s you. Happy reading! — E. Lockhart
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I’ll have to tell you if it’s “me” after I’ve read it.

Terry Pratchett’s Wintersmith, the next book detailing the adventures of Tiffany Aching, is due in the UK in September… and in the US in October.

I want to move to the UK.

Randomly…

Well, good is bound to win occasionally. This time good comes in the form of the the ACLU and a judge who ordered the Miami-Dade School Board to replace the disputed book Vamos a Cuba. Ole!

Meanwhile, in its quiet quest to take over the world, Amazon now sells…groceries. Okay. I’m not going to buy books from them anymore, but I might buy the occasional CD… but groceries?! Not so much. Incidentally, they plan to sell many organic products, trying to score that market share as well. Hm.

Sir Richard Branson of Virgin everything fame is playing that eccentric millionaire type again by getting into books. He’s bankrolling, of all things, Virgin Comics — comic books with Indian storylines. Joined by holistic author Deepak Chopra, his son, Gotham, Indian comic trailblazer Sharad Devarajan and others, this project looks to be really interesting. A South Asian professor introduced me during MFA days to Tibetan, Indian and Filipino folk and fairytales, and the vivid portrayals of dashing heroes, tricksters, lewd buffoons, gods, monsters, tragic heroines and hugely exaggerated villains seem to make comic books and Indian stories an obvious match. I’m intrigued!

Well, for those of you anxiously watching my mailbox with me, the editorial letter is still AOL. The heat wave and power outages in NY can’t be helping… Meanwhile, we all just…Keep…Working…

Does this mean I'll finally get it?

The BBC reported early last month that physicist Stephen Hawking is writing a children’s book. Usually I whinge when celebrities take on children’s lit, but this time I’m all for it. A nonfiction science book written by a… scientist! Bravo! May the tribe of scientists increase.

Does this mean I’ll finally get it?

The BBC reported early last month that physicist Stephen Hawking is writing a children’s book. Usually I whinge when celebrities take on children’s lit, but this time I’m all for it. A nonfiction science book written by a… scientist! Bravo! May the tribe of scientists increase.

This and That

Strange things in my email:

We’ve noticed that customers who have purchased A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle also purchased books by Martina Mackova. For this reason, you might like to know that Martina Mackova’s Phytoremediation and Rhizoremediation: Theoratical Background (Focus on Biotechnology) will be released soon. You can pre-order your copy by following the link below.

Um, Amazon? You’re SO not getting the book connections here. Phytoremediation!? Still, have to give them their props; they’re still trying to keep my business… but after all the carnage I’ve seen them do to independent bookstores, I’m making a conscious choice to buy books elsewhere. Go independents!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I am taking five cool minutes to say hello and let you know about the Carnival of Children’s Literature going on at Big A little a. This is a MAJOR undertaking, where a children’s blogger does a roundup of all of the fantastic commentary on kidlit going on all over the web. Since Blogger is being an absolute pain, I haven’t been able to comment to them what a fantastic job I think she did, but bravo Ms. Kelly, and thanks for all of the links!

Because race continues to be a daily occurrence, I’m going to make an occasional point of talking about race and racial issues in YA and children’s fiction, calling attention to those who deserve kudos, etc. The carnival links above netted me a new blog to read I Write For Young Adults, So Take That (which is as good and snarky a title as I’ve ever loved), and highlighted in On Being Black in Fiction, the article by Pam Noles that talked about the shameful way that the Sci-Fi channel handled The Legend of Earthsea miniseries.

If you’re not a sci-fi geek like me, maybe you’re not familiar with the charmed and delicious worlds of Ursula K. LeGuin and the novel wonder that is Earthsea. (Become familiar! You won’t regret it!!!) In 2004 the Sci-fi channel (and notice no link! I’m still furious with them, and have boycotted the channel.) hijacked her Earthsea novels into a movie… I was so bitterly disappointed I could almost have cried. (I spent the whole time wailing “But that’s not how it happened!” to my TV.) The characters, who were brown-skinned in the book, were cast almost uniformly and bewilderingly with Caucasian actors. This completely negated the flipflop that LeGuin created — that Earthsea was made up of brown people, and that the pale skinned ones were the ones enslaved and shunned, that the brown-skinned people needed to learn to see them as human, etc. etc. It gave readers the chance to ponder a different world, it gave a chance for sci-fi fans of color to finally have a world in which they were represented, and it was ruined in film for a reason I cannot yet comprehend (except for the obvious, my opinion that BOOKS SHOULD ALMOST NEVER BE MADE INTO MOVIES. Ahem. Well, it’s only my opinion…).

When we saw the movie, we wondered why LeGuin allowed the wreckage. It reassured me to discover that LeGuin hated it, called it “Earthsea in Clorox” and generally made sure that her readers knew that this was something taken away from her. Though the producers of the film said that they followed the “intent” of the novel (please.) LeGuin straight up said they ruined it.

This is, of course, old news, but it reminded me of some additional books in the fantasy genre whose brave writers, while perhaps not brown-skinned themselves, dared to include brown skinned characters in cool roles in their books. I especially love Nancy Farmer’s book, The Ear, The Eye and The Arm, and the warriors and blacksmiths who use magic in Tamora Pierce’s Circle of Magic books. It can be done and done well! Rejoice!

Incidentally, Studio Ghibli is taking a stab at doing the Earthsea books justice, releasing the Japanese version called Gedo Senki. As the few black manga characters I’ve ever seen are either evil and male or just incidental characters in crowd scenes, I was interested to see if they would include brown characters for Earthsea. No such luck. Goro Miyazaki’s an amazingly gifted artist, and really captures the feel of Earthsea, as the trailer shows. Still, manga is not the place to find positive characters of African or Indian descent… maybe someday.

Flickr Fiction Friday Forestalled

I’m never sure if this quote is quite true… I don’t write to taste life twice, but sometimes that’s just what happens regardless… regurgitated life: now in Technicolor! Erg.

Everyone is busy, busy, busy, so no fiction today, just lies. I’m taking advantage of the lull in my writing group and trying to edit and finish two chapters of my latest novel; I’m taking comfort in not hearing from my agent this week and pretending that no news is good news, and Edit Hell is at this time temporarily suspended… no one is lashing me with a whip, which means its time to get on with work on my own.

So cheers! and have a grand weekend.

International Blog Against Racism Week continues…

“But the movie just happened to be cast that way. No one sat down and decided to be racist, it just coincidentally happened that the Jewish characters were all greedy, the Hispanic ones all spoke in bad English, the Asians were sexless geeks, and the white characters were articulate, smart, sexy, and heroic!

It is quite possible that no one decided to be racist. However, movies do not descend from Heaven, untouched by human hands.”

Quoting here one of the brainiacs behind this IBAR week, Rachel Manija Brown.

So, you didn’t wake up this morning and decide to be a racist, but you are.

Yes, you. Yes, me. EVERYONE is racially biased somehow.

Racism wasn’t something overt when I was growing up. We lived and worshipped in an integrated community; our Latino neighbors brought back special treats for us when they came back from Mexico, and shared their home made capirotada with us during Lent. Our next door neighbor, Petra, taught us German swear words (thanks, Pete!) and though there were a few other Black families in the neighorhood, I’m pretty sure not many of them wrapped up in a serape to walk the dogs at night like my father did (my apologies, Rubio and Diaz families. He embarrasses the crap out of us, too.) My parents, born and raised in the South, were in grade school during the 60’s integration, and my father to this day refuses to eat at restaurants because he recalls the threat of Black chefs and busboys spitting in the entrees of White diners. My grandparents on my mother’s side were poor and less educated; my Mother’s mother only finished fourth grade before she had to stay home and help out. Thus, I expect my grandmother to be weird about race. She’s lived in the same little two stoplight town in Southern Louisiana her whole life, and, frankly, doesn’t know any better. I have always been ready to forgive her, to smooth over the oddities she said (like she told my sister, “Don’t let Pete sit on your bed, you don’t know where whitefolks’ backsides has been!” O…kay…), but when I accosted them in my mother, the Valedictorian and homecoming queen of her high school, the perfect woman I adored, I couldn’t face it.

It happened when I was fourteen. Coming back from a Youth Action trip, after building a dairy or something out in the sticks of Southern Mexico, I rode the fourteen hours on the train to the Border sitting next to a boy named Gamel Mohammed Mozeb. He was from somewhere outside of Lodi, almost twenty, the only son of his parents, funny and thoughtful and already engaged to marry a girl from back home he’d never even met.

I found him fascinating. I mean — my goodness — in this day and age, to have an arranged marriage!? I pelted him with endless questions, and he was patient and didn’t laugh too much. His deep voice carried not a hint of an accent, but he taught me a few words in his language (a Pakistani dialect which I can’t recall), and told me a little about how his wedding would go — the feasting, the sheet hung out the window (which made me just about die, poor 8th grade me), and everything. It was a world completely outside of my experience. I was glad to have met this guy.

After our trip, we kept in touch. I got a card or a phone call from Gamel every couple of weeks for a long time. He suggested I come out and visit his family. Knowing how completely strict my father was, I didn’t really think it would happen, but I mentioned it to my mother nonetheless. Her reaction shocked me, made me feel ashamed and culpable for something that hadn’t even happened.

That day in our kitchen, my mother, in her typically calm way planted doubts in my brain. She said that I should be careful of that kind of man. Man? I thought to myself. He’s only nineteen! Men from those countries, my mother informed me, the invisible quotes heavy in her voice, didn’t care how young a girl was, they wanted to marry them. Gamel wasn’t really my friend, or an innocent kid who’d been raised in the States and was being sent to Pakistan to meet his wife. My mother inferred that he was a shyster, and sexually depraved, and he was probably sizing me up to be his second wife.

Admittedly, I had mixed emotions about this. To be totally honest, I had a mad crush on Gamel, the kind you can really only have in junior high. I really liked his big warm solidity, his deep thrumming voice, his interesting conversational skills, his history and culture that were nothing like mine. But I could sooner see space travel that converting to Islam, and I’d sooner go without air than think of marriage, when no one had even ever kissed me more than on the cheek. I couldn’t imagine myself as a wife, much less a second wife. I was anxious and nauseous and flattered. I could hardly talk to Gamel when he called, and my anxiety began to communicate itself to him. Pretty soon he didn’t phone at all anymore.

I guess I shouldn’t be melodramatic – he had a weding to go to, after all, and that fall he went off to unknown climes to meet his unknown wife, but I should have liked to have met her myself and have known the end of the story. Coming back to the States in her pretty salwar suits and being plunked into the middle of Acampo must have been a massive culture shock to the girl. Was she as young as me? Did she speak English? Did she like Gamel as much as I did? I like to think I could have been her friend. But I doubted myself, I doubted Gamel’s motives, and I lost a chance.

This is not a good memory. Even now I am cringing in my chair, so uncomfortable setting my mother in such a bad light, but there it is: she said or inferred all of that, and I believed her. I know: no mother of a 14-year- old in her right mind lets her daughter date a boy who is almost twenty, I know, I know. Mom was just doing her best to shield me from… me? From him? From people of ‘his kind?” If we had remained friends, maybe nothing would have come of it. Maybe something would have. Either way, I wish things hadn’t ended that way, with a taint on the memory… I wish I could have made up my own mind without insinuations about people from those kinds of countries. I wish I’d been a little more mature, a little smarter… I wish…

Here’s a quote from SF Chronicle columnist Jon Carroll:
“What matters is behavior. We are all racists, but we do not need to act as racists do. Tolerance is a daily act. If we try to remember the spark of humanity that lives in every person, we manage to get along. If we tell our own truths, understanding that our truths may not be the Truth, so much the better. ” – Jon Carroll, 2/17/01

Tolerance is a daily act.

In a day-to-day world where now in the Central Valley it is a scary and dangerous thing to belong to a mosque, where you can be hassled for wearing a turban or arrested just for looking too South Asian or Arabic, I think of my old friend Gamel, and wish him well.