More Thoughts

Checking all the Progressive boxes is not more important than doing something raw, and honest, and true.

It’s possible for something to not jibe with the current social justice discourse consensus, and still be brilliant, and beautiful, and valuable.

Do not measure artistic quality by how closely it aligns to the latest political vocabulary pack. Get over rough language. Move past being anxious about speaking to everybody–it’s hard enough to truly speak to yourself.

It’s braver to be deeply honest about one facet of the world than it is to try and get nothing wrong about everything.

I feel like there’s something coming, some idea I’ve been groping towards for months. Feeling around the edges until I find enough of a grip to heave it up out of the mud.

Fuck The Representation Debate

These are unformed thoughts that I’m still working through, but I want to get them out there:

Can we please move past the tedious circle of arguing about the need for greater representation of women and minorities in fiction? It’s important. There. That‘s a solved question.

What’s more important, and far more interesting I think, is what you do once you’ve decided that your narrative defaults are going to represent the world as it is–a place where white men are a global minority. It’s actually a real easy switch to make, and there’s no excuse not to.

But once you’ve done that, where do you go from there? Can representation be an artistic goal in and of itself?

NO. NOT EVEN FUCKING CLOSE.

You know what happens if you make diverse representation your main artistic objective? You get the left-wing equivalent of the runny gruel that passes for Evangelical Christian “alternatives” to mainstream culture.

At this point, I think it’s more feminist to make art about women that’s grungy, rude, painful, and raw than it is to pound your chest about how many times you pass the Bechdel Test. Having representation of a diverse population is literally the very least you can do–letting it be your gold standard is to embrace mediocrity. It should be a prerequisite, not an achievement.

Twenty Years On

Undersecretary for the Minister of Magic Hermione Granger-Weasley unlocked her front door and shut it behind her with a sigh.

“How was work, honey?” asked Ron from the living room. He was always in the living room, transfixed by the television. Hermione regretted buying it; she should have made a clean break from the Muggle world. At least she’d managed to keep her mouth shut about the Internet.

“Beastly. The Americans are making noise, and I think the French are getting ready to back out. This summit is going to be a disaster.” She let out a breath, and with it as much stress as she could. “How was your day?”

“I made sandwiches,” Ron announced proudly.

Big News!

I’ve got an agent! I am now represented by Saritza Hernandez of the Corvisiero Agency! I completely forgot to put up a post about it here because I’ve been so inundated with a sudden flurry of activity about Dreadnought now that I’ve got an agent. (Did you know there’s a lot of work that happens immediately after signing with an agent? There is. There is SO much, but it’s more exciting than drudgery because holy crap things are finally happening!)

One of the major things that’s underway is planning for a new website which will be at aprildaniels.com. There’s nothing there now, but in a few weeks this blog and all its content will mosey on over to that URL.

I’ve also been completely snowed in by a HUGE PILE of research as I get ready to work on my next project. I’m not quite ready to announce what it is, but I think you’ll all be quite excited when I am. My agent sure is. (Guys! I’ve got an agent!)

Anyhow! Excited!

How does Steven Moffat keep getting work?

“There’s one thing you should never put in a trap–”
“A wolf? A trapped wolf is dangerous to get out of your trap.”
“What? No. Me.”
“Why is it dangerous to put you in a trap?”
“Well…because I’m the Doctor…”
“So?”
“So I’m very dangerous when I’m trapped.”
“But not when you’re free?”
“That’s not what I–”
“Look, if you’re not dangerous when you’re free, then how do you keep getting trapped?”
“I don’t KEEP getting trapped!”
“Then how has it happened so often that you have a rule about it?”
“Hold on, let’s start again from the beginning…”
“Right. So, wolves.”
“Not wolves! Me! I’m dangerous to put in a trap!”
“But not more dangerous than you are when you’re free.”
“Correct.”
“So how do you keep getting captured?”

Take Your Advantages Where You Can Find Them

So, I’m not a published author. In fact, I’m given to understand that my lack of publishing credits means I shouldn’t claim to be an author, but a writer instead. Being an author is something I’ve wanted so bad I can taste it, and for so long I can barely remember what it was like before I had this ambition. Raymond Chandler allegedly said that to be any good at this, you’ve got to write a million words of crap. In my (very rough) estimation, I’m probably at the 750,000 mark.

127,000 of those are included in the manuscript I just finished, which is a sequel to 118,000 other words I wrote two years ago. In between, I wrote 87,000 words in Dreadnought, and 18,000 words of a sequel to Dreadnought that I abandoned in favor of my most recent project. A few years prior to that, I wrote probably about 70,000 words total in a project that I never completed before shelving it for being too ambitious. So all together, that’s about 402,000 words. Then add what I imagine is about 300,000 words of Mary Sue infested Star Trek fanfic that has been blissfully lost in the foggy depths of the Internet, plus another 50,000 or so worth of various other scribblings.

By the strict “million words of crap” metric, I’m not ready for prime time. For a while, I thought that  I was too good to hold to that line, too clever and talented to need to use my full million. Lately, with the perspective that comes from finishing at least the first draft of three manuscripts, I’ve started to re-evaluate that position. On top of that, there’s the fat stack of rejections from agents and editors that I’ve collected in the past year and a half of querying for my various projects. I’ve gotten close a few times, but never quite far enough, and that has a humbling effect.

So I’m not going to be the Next Big Thing by the end of the year, in all likelihood. Or the end of the next one, I imagine. Even if an agent where to call me up in the middle of drafting this sentence and beg to represent me, it’d likely still be two years or more before I debuted as a modest new name in a crowded field with little or no fanfare to boost me. I’ve got friends who are at or near the top of their respective fields in publishing, and they haven’t passed on any illusions about easy success. I am going to keep writing, because it’s what I love to do. But professional success is off the menu, at least for the time being.

Which is fine. I’ve decided to take it as a blessing. My life, thus far, has been harder than most of my peers, and easier than some of my friends. One of the things I’ve learned is that you don’t get to pick your circumstances. Oh sure, you’ve got to put in your hustle. The only time good luck matters worth a damn is when you’re already pushing with everything you’ve got. So you’ve got to push, and keep pushing, and get comfortable with pushing because you’re never going to be able to stop if you want to keep going forward. But even with all the effort in the world, you still need that luck. The circumstances of a life are, in large part, not of the making of the people who have to live it.

So one of the things you’ve got to do while you’re pushing that boulder up the hill again and again is learn to see what parts of the circumstances you’re living with right now can be turned to your advantage. So it looks like part of my life right now is that being published is not on the horizon, no matter how much I want it.

Okay, that sucks. But–

But that means that I’ve got years to get better at this than I am now. Even after a tall order of humble pie, I still think I’m pretty good at this. Or, I have potential, anyhow. In general, people enjoy the things I write for them to read. And with every manuscript I finish drafting out, with every revision I polish up, I get better. I can see how my most recent book is better than the one I wrote  before it, and how that book is better than the one that came before it.

My first book has a big mushy middle where the two lead characters sort of hang out getting to know one another for 70 pages. Given that I’ve got half a mind to serialize it online, this is a huge problem since a serialization model requires each installment to end on a note that will compel the reader to check in next week to find out what happens next. I’m mulling over the idea of hiring a freelance editor to take a look at how we could tighten up the middle of the book.

My second book, Dreadnought, doesn’t have that problem. From word one, everything that goes on in that book happens as a direct consequence of what came before. There aren’t any segments where characters sort of wait around getting to know each other while the plot takes its time arriving. But, that middle segment is carried on the shoulders of a supporting character who sort of drives the action for a while until it’s time for Danny to take up the mantle of Dreadnought and save the day. Given that this supporting character is easily a favorite among my beta readers, and that she and Danny are supposed to be equal partners in crime-fighting, this isn’t a huge problem, but it’s there. I notice it. (Or, at least now I notice it, with the benefit of more perspective.)

My third book, a sequel to the first one, takes the structural lessons I learned from Dreadnought and improved on them. It also managed a greater synthesis between the emotional/character development of the protagonist and the plot. At this point, I can turn out a pretty damn good first-person narrative that’s heavily driven by the protagonist’s emotions. Some time down the line, I’ll likely be able to see where this book’s big flaw is, but right now I’m too close to it, too proud of completing it.

So now I’ve got to figure out what I’m going to do for my fourth manuscript. Remember that sequel to Dreadnought that got sidelined? I was planning to go back for it, but I don’t think I will, at least not right now. Both Dreadnought and my other books are first person stories with deadpan narrators who go through a big change. I’ve written three of these kinds of books, I’m kind of running out of lessons to learn from the form.

Now, if I was a published author, there would either be pressure to turn in a sequel to something that sold well, or a lot of anxiety about how they’d never publish me again after I wrote something that bombed. And here’s where we come back to finding advantages in your circumstances, even if they’re not what you’d have chosen. I’m not published. I don’t have any contracts to live up to. I don’t have a readership to cement. I’ve got nothing but time and a word processor.

So I can write whatever the fuck I want.

One of my other projects I mentioned, the 70k project that got shelved, had some good ideas in it that I can salvage. In the years since I put that project away, I’ve learned more and gained new ideas about life. Combine these all with a plot bunny that latched onto my ankle yesterday, and I’ve got the makings of a new book, something radically different than anything I’ve done before. The plot itself is going to be a fairly workmanlike adventure yarn that I’m trying to keep as simple as possible because there’s a lot of other problems that I’ve never had to deal with before that I’ll need to come to grips with. This is also the first book where I’m going to do significant worldbuilding before I sit down to start drafting, because that seems like a skillset a genre writer should have.

This book may never get published. It might be read by 15 people total. It doesn’t matter.

I love doing this. I love getting better. And if I’m not going to get plucked from obscurity any time soon, then I might as well use that obscurity to improve my craft as much as I can. Push, push, keep on pushing to be better, so that maybe, someday, when I finally sell a manuscript, it will be the best work I can do.

Or maybe I’ll go another direction, and start self-pubbing. Stop waiting for someone to hand me a golden ticket and start digging for one myself. Maybe I’ll spin up a constellation of pen names and jump from one wildly divergent project to the next. I don’t know yet. That’s the best part: I don’t have to know yet.I just have to keep writing.

Some Thoughts On The Interveiw

I guess I’m not super outraged about The Interview being pulled from theaters because things that speak to my groups get canned all the time for less reason.

In all this rush to condemn Sony, I would like people to remember that Sony only canned the release after the theater groups refused to show the movie. Yes, it’s concerning that theater groups bowed to the threats, but since the Batman shooting happened so comparatively recently, it’s hard to fault them for taking the safety of their theaters seriously. I wish they’d found a better way to do that, I think the theaters should have asked for police protection rather than cave. I think that the police departments of the US should have provided that protection free of charge in the spirit of our First Amendment.

With that being said, the chest-thumping outrage that some people are displaying is something I cannot relate to at all. I guess you could say that my opposition to these decisions is intellectual. Principled. But devoid of any passion or sentiment.

And here’s why: the voices of my trans sisters are constantly being muted, distorted, crimped, appropriated, and shunted to the side, and when we complain about this we are told we are too sensitive. Or that we have to make allowances, given how “new” and “unusual” we are. We’re told that as a minority, we don’t have the right to expect high quality representation, that our stories are niche, a bonus, a coupon for an ally cookie. And sometimes there are threats, too. Of rape and death and all the worst things. Our art–and our lives–are constantly under siege. We are not heard, not seen, and the more we fight back against that, the worse the counterattacks are. What these guys are going through, as horrible as it is, is nothing compared to what I’ve seen people close to me endure just in the past few weeks and months.

That’s where I come from. That’s where I live. And now some rich, straight, white, cisgender dudes are acting like civilization is about to come crashing down because they were denied access to a platform. And, I’m sorry, I simply cannot muster any outrage about that.

Because remember, Sony hasn’t said they’ll never release the movie. It could show up on Netflix tomorrow for all we know. What happened here was that the owners of a private platform decided they didn’t want to deal with the security threat that this movie allegedly posed, so they denied the use of their platform. And, again, I have principled, intellectual objections to that. I wish they’d taken a stand, but they chose not to, and now Seth Rogan will have to comfort himself by buying some whiskey with part his $8.4 million paycheck. I’m not sure how our Republic can recover from such a blow.

And that private platform he was denied? Me and my trans sisters are almost never allowed up on to it. When we are, we’re depicted as rapists, serial killers, pathetic imposters, or garish counterfeits of femininity. If we’re really, really lucky, we get shitty retrograde bullshit like TransAmerica that doesn’t make us out to be unhinged psychopaths but does perpetuate a raft of hurtful, inaccurate stereotypes about us. But folks like Seth Rogan get to star in movies all the time. And he still can. He can continue to have a career in movies of the sort that only members of his demographic are privileged to have.

And like I said, I object to what’s happened to his movie. I object to any display of art being curtailed by thuggish threats. But don’t ask me to get angry about a multimillionaire straight, white, cisgender dudebro dealing with what it’s like for the rest of us for once in his life.

Waiting Periods for Hormone Replacement Therapy

One of the things that trans people have to put up with when we try to transition is cis doctors refusing to prescribe hormones for us until we’ve jumped through their stupid fucking hoops. I basically had to lie to the shrink I was seeing to get mine in a timely manner. This was in 2011, when I was homeless and constantly on the edge of suicide. I told my doctors this. They knew this. Still, they delayed, out of some allegiance to a medical standard written by cis people from a cis-centrist perspective. I remember vividly that some of my nastier brushes with ideation would happen after various frustrating delays of the process of being allowed to start taking hormones. They played with my life, and they thought they were helping me.

Waiting periods for hormones are an inhuman abomination. They have no moral justification whatsoever. It is not, however, an enormous surprise that they remain hugely popular among the various groups that get to set policy for the prescription of hormone replacement therapy. Cis people would rather torture a trans woman for three months or an entire year or however long they decide is sufficient for them to allow us some self determination, they’d rather keep our lives and sanity right up against the precipice, they’d rather we suffer in miserable agony knowing every day the damage gets worse, than risk allowing even a single cis man to “make a mistake.” Because trans lives don’t matter, and cis comfort does.

But isn’t there room for reasonable people to disagree–

NO. There is no room for reasonable people to disagree about this. What we have room for is us forgiving you for supporting and promoting a system that does incalculable damage to us every fucking day. And in most times, in most ways, we do forgive you, without grudge or hesitation. But don’t ever confuse that forgiveness with us agreeing to disagree.

The care and treatment of transgender people should be done in accordance with medical ethics guides written by transgender doctors and bioethicists. That’s the only way I see the system ever really working for us. Of course, I hardly expect this to ever be the case, what with the “conflict of interest” and all. More plausible in the short to medium term, we need to make the informed consent model the default model, and the one that the laws defer to. Until then, more of us will suffer needlessly, all for the sake of a hypothetical cis man who got confused.

“GamerGate didn’t do that.”

Okay, there’s a meme floating around that I want to take a pot shot at here if you’ll bear with me for a moment. It goes something like this: “How can you say that GamerGate even enters into the threats against Anita/Zoe/Brianna/etc? Where’s the proof? Where’s the evidence? Did they support this? Did they applaud this?”

Right. So that’s the meme. You’ve seen it around, right?

Here’s my answer:

Well, there’s been the months long pattern of escalating harassment that has proven links to a lot of GG incubators like 4chan/8chan, certain closed IRC channels, etc. There’s the fact that multiple specific threats have been made against more than one woman, all of whom have been sucked up into this bullshit tornado at one point or another, and the threats against their lives just happen to coincide with new waves of outrage among GamerGaters. There’s the fact that at least one of the specific threats mentioned GamerGate in its text, and probably more but I can’t be arsed to run down an exhaustive list just because you whine at me. There’s the fact that Adam Baldwin, the guy who coined the term GamerGate and is pretty much its most high profile booster, has a history of trying to dismiss threats as fake threat, or saying that Anita was somehow milking it or anyhow it wasn’t actually a big deal or if it was a big deal it had nothing to do with GG and she was still vile slime who should just shut up.

I mean, other than that, no, there’s not much to go on.

Look, this shit doesn’t happen among car enthusiasts or music fans. Movie buffs and sports geeks don’t do this kind of thing, at least not in any world I’m familiar with. But this *does* happen in gamer communities, and it happens frequently. It’s been happening for years. It keeps happening no matter how many times the respectable moderates post about how shocked and horrified (did we mention horrified?) they are that someone would make death threats against those women they’d been calling skanky hagcunts for months on end. GamerGate itself isn’t new or unique or really even that different than anything that’s come before it; it’s only a crystallization of a lot of really horrible trends and patterns that have been around for years. So if you really, really want to, you can draw neat lines and pretend that GG has nothing to do with (certain) threats. That’s not a real credible position, and you’re going to have to make some untenable arguments, but you can try. You can clap your hands make believe.

But that doesn’t change the fact that gaming, as a subculture, is showing itself embarrassingly childish, nasty, and cruel, or that these threats grow out of that environment. GamerGate embodies that. It was founded to shame a woman for having sex, and any claim to the contrary is chaff and propaganda. These threats are the logical, perhaps even deliberate, outcome of those first early planning meetings held in an IRC Channel. To claim otherwise is to, at best, be a useful idiot for some of the most hateful, bigoted people on the Internet.

And that’s a shitty place to be in life.

Cascade Writers Workshop Writeup

So I just got back from the 2014 Cascade Writers conference, held this year in beautiful Kent, Washington. Wonderful, glorious Kent, where they have a Denny’s and a Mitzel’s.

But aside from the wonderful (not really) location, the conference itself was quite lovely. I met some new people and cemented some friendships from last year. I went to pitch practice and accidentally brought down the house with a better than expected pitch that later nabbed me a pair of manuscript requests when I got to try it on actual agents. My writing plans, so fuzzy and unsure before I departed have now solidified into solid game plans for the rest of the year and beyond. I’m going to finish the two sequels I’m currently working on, and then start on a new, unrelated project that’s an expansion of the short piece I submitted for workshop this year.

Also, I have become the Twitter goddess for the conference, and am now in control of fully half of the Cascade Writers convention’s social media presence. My reign of terror shall know nothing but triumph, I am sure. Next year we’re going to have the convention at a much better location, and will hopefully have both larger attendance and a functioning hashtag. (This year’s tag got crushed by a wielder’s conference that was about a billion time’s our size and using the same tag.) By that time, I should have the new project’s first draft finished, so we shall see what–if anything–I submit from it next time. If I still haven’t picked up an agent by then, I may pitch for the new project as well.

All in all, a successful trip.