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About Everett Maroon

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So far Everett Maroon has created 7 blog entries.

How I Knew I Was a Klutz

By |2020-03-28T13:43:02-05:00June 20th, 2011|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog, Guest Blogs|Tags: |

It’s been a blast writing for the good folks and readers of Gay YA—I believe in the core of my being that young readers need these stories, especially as there are so many nincompoops out there who would slam the entire genre and dismiss our hard work out of hand. Those naysayers are not our audience, after all. I hope you’ll come and see me over at my blog, Trans/Plant/Portation, and elsewhere around the net. And I do suspect I’ll be back here from time to time, as the powers that be are inclined. Happy reading, and happy [...]

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Finding an Audience

By |2020-03-28T13:43:02-05:00June 14th, 2011|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog, Guest Blogs, Writers on Writing|Tags: |

I've looked at stories, characters, plot devices, layering, the writer's mission, and some of the tropes around gay YA and genre fiction this past month or so, but left to examine among many other aspects of writing is audience. Not all writers seek publication, and that's fine, but for those of us who want to get our words communicated to the world outside our heads should understand our options, the market, and readers' expectations. In no particular order: Get your work in line with your mission—Looking to write crossover or mainstream YA novels? Then there needs to be [...]

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When Darkness Falls

By |2020-03-28T13:43:03-05:00June 6th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

A little explosion happened on the Internet this weekend when Meghan Cox Gurdon, writing for The Wall Street Journal, took aim at contemporary young adult literature for what she saw as too much gruesomeness, violence, and "darkness," which defies specificity so much as to be next to meaningless. I'd like to unpack some of what was offered by Ms. Gurdon and respond. And because I was gearing up to write about mentors in gay YA before her article came out, I'll try to include a bit of that here, too. The world is significantly different in 2011 than [...]

How Trans Happens

By |2020-03-28T13:43:05-05:00June 1st, 2011|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog, Writers on Writing|Tags: , |

There's a fight going on, but not many people know about it. It boils down to what most fights look like after a long time simmering and evaporating away their unnecessary parts—the right to tell a story. Like many other battles this one is about a people, power, and ownership. I'm talking about where transgender comes from, why it occurs, and what meaning to draw from it. If we left it up to The New York Times and David Letterman, transgender people, all, struggle with being the wrong sex in the wrong body. Chances are they know it [...]

Considering Intersectionality

By |2020-03-28T13:43:05-05:00May 23rd, 2011|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog, Writers on Writing|Tags: , , , |

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about creating multi-layered characters as one of my goals as a transgender writer. I was talking about LGBT characters at the time, but pulling back a bit on those parameters, I think the dedication to crafting believable, complex characters should extend to every personality in the narrative. And if we're going to support well rounded character development as writers, we should remember to support intersectionality while we're at it. All I mean here about intersectionality is that I want to include a liberatory understanding of the differently positioned, race, ethnic, class, [...]

LGBT Themes and Science Fiction: Fast Friends

By |2020-03-28T13:43:06-05:00May 16th, 2011|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog, Writers on Writing|Tags: , , , |

I write speculative fiction, usually somewhere between soft science fiction and magical realism, and often, though not exclusively, with LGBT themes and characters. I suppose I could write more mainstream stories, but I like to twist things up and mess with the universe, and besides, I'm a genre geek. I swear this is less from a God complex perspective, and more about playfulness and political intent. Metaphors for transition, coming out, family acceptance, and the like can replace a description of the real thing, and in so doing, open up some space away from angst so more time [...]

My Goals as a Trans Writer

By |2020-03-28T13:43:18-05:00May 9th, 2011|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog, Writers on Writing|Tags: , |

Like many writers I know, I took a meandering path to this writing profession, starting out confident and then dedicating a long decade in quicksand—I think it's called self-doubt—after which I think I found myself in the center of the earth, and let me just say, it's hotter than I thought it would be down there. During this long break I suppose I opted to have a sex change, and then I realized that I needed to write about my transition. I didn't want to relate a tale of anguish and grief. Instead, I focused on the ludicrous [...]

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