Me, the killer

Here, I was killing a lousy stinky usurious credit card from hell. The story Mercy was less comedic.

Here, I was killing a lousy stinky usurious credit card from hell. The story "Mercy" was less comedic.

A couple of years ago, I occasionally took part in writing for a project an online acquaintance of mine created called the Scheherazade Project. Scheherazade was the famous storyteller of The Arabian Nights (also known as the Thousand and One Nights) who married the ruler Shahryar, a man who was deeply embittered against women & made it his policy to each day marry a young woman, have his way with her that night, & the following day have her executed.  Scheherazade, who as the daughter of the king’s vizier was immune from having to marry the king, nevertheless volunteered herself.  She saved her life & those of countless other young women by each night telling the king a tale so compelling that he would spare her life for another day in order to hear the end of the tale the next night. The next night, of course, she’d not only give him the end of the story, bu would also start a new one.  In the end, he finally gave up on killing because he liked good stories.

Normally, the Scheherazade Project didn’t involve killing.  It involved the moderator — my online acquaintance to begin with, then other people — tossing out a theme, & participants writing short stories or vignettes or whatever to satisfy that theme. We’d post them to our blogs, then let the moderator know where our story could be found, & she’d compile a link list.

Life being what it was, I think I only wrote two pieces for the Scheherazade Project — in May 2006, on the theme of fear, I wrote “Hiisi”, & in October 2007 — well. Here’s the only time I know of that the Scheherazade Project did involve killing. Its theme was you, the killer. As the moderator put it, the theme called for “(hopefully) fictional stories about you killing somebody else. It could be accidental. It could be deliberate. It could be a complete stranger. Or it could be someone that you’re intimately familiar with.”

Mercy (click through)

I wrote a piece called “Mercy.” The point-of-view character is a fictional character I created some time ago for a collaborative work between a friend and me, which I hope one day we’ll take up again. While fictional, Kadu, who later becomes Yksin, holds a lot of me in her, or I hold a lot of her, or both — enough that for years I’ve used Yksin as a username in various venues, & enough that I can call this a “fictional story about me,” of sorts. (Note to world: the murder in the piece is all the way fictional. Thanks.)

I wrote a narrative account of the events described in this piece in 2004, but in third person, & in a pretty direct storytelling style. “Mercy” describes the same events, but from Kadu’s (“my”) own perspective.

This was, in fact, the only time I ever wrote that character in first person. Adrienne Rich once said that the formalism of her early poetry was like “asbestos gloves” that “allowed me to handle materials I couldn’t pick up bare-handed.” Fiction has a similar shielding effect. Especially, for me, when written in the third person. But the gloves of a first person POV are a lot less impervious to heat. So “Mercy” hit it me a lot harder in the writing than I thought it would.

It’s two years later, & it’s still kind of a scary piece.  But I feel a lot better for having written it, than I think I would have felt for actually killing someone. There’s something to be said for imagining, instead of doing.  You can read it here (original blog post) or here (HTML version on my website).

Posted in Short fiction | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Me, the killer

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-29: NaNoWriMo 2009 kickoff #1

The waning gibbous moon as seen from my window shortly before I headed to the Elim Cafe for the NaNoWriMo kickoff.

The waning gibbous moon as seen from my window shortly before I headed to the Elim Cafe for the NaNoWriMo kickoff.

Here’s my brief slideshow of picks from the kickoff. We’ll have another kickoff Saturday night/Sunday morning — a midnight write off to begin the month of headalong hurry writing.

Posted in NaNoWriMo, The Daily Tweets | Tagged , , | Comments Off on The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-29: NaNoWriMo 2009 kickoff #1

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-28

  • Alaska Amber Alert – child believed abducted near Patterson. Description should update shortly on AK Amber Alert page http://bit.ly/akamber #
  • RT: @tonei: "Seemingly intelligent people often become stupid when it comes to [trans] issues." // Ossiander #
  • AK Amber Alert taking long time to update w/ info on child believed abducted near Patterson, just heard on KSKA. http://bit.ly/akamber #
  • APD has Amber Alert: 12-yr-old Charlene Connelly possibly abducted by 16-yr-old Elijah Brewster — photos. http://bit.ly/4b4CBz #
  • Called Troopers to find out why Amber Alert page not updated. They're having issues w/ website but child is found apparently safe/okay. #
  • The only thing you don't deserve about that sentence Bill Allen is that it should be much more than 3 years. http://bit.ly/aHtW2 #
  • Pie Spy is wrong. One shouldn't stalk pie: one should forthrightly declare one's intent to eat more than one's fair share of it. #
  • Jerry Prevo & Jim Minnery being oppressed! No longer legally okay to assault queer folk for being queer! #lgbt http://bit.ly/4xtuLq #
Posted in The Daily Tweets | Comments Off on The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-28

How to Find Your True Love: A Method

Tattoo

This isn’t the tattoo in the story whose name matches this post’s title — but it is one of my tattoos, one that I got in December (or maybe November) 1983, not long after I thought the story up.  As I recall, I was living in a basement apartment with a roommate, nearing the end of my first year in Alaska, & a couple of friends who both had tattoos were crashing on our living room floor for a couple of weeks while they tried to find a place to live.  One night one of them brought over a substance that at that time it was not illegal in Alaska to possess for personal use, & we got high.

Thus was “How to Find Your True Love: A Method” born: a tale of pool, tattoos, & dykes in an Anchorage queer bar.

Took me awhile to actually write the story down, though.  Until along about 1989, during my three-year exile in Seattle.  Sometime in the early 1990s I think I got it published — maybe in the Klondyke Kontact, an irregularly published Alaska lesbian newsletter, or maybe in… well, I can’t really remember, actually.  A couple years later in 1996, when I was in a grad writing program at UAA, I ran short of time coming up on a deadline for a short fiction workshop, so I kinda sorta in a way cheated by submitting a brushed-up version of the story. It got a pretty weird workshop crit, too: with the focus that MFA programs have on a particular type of literary fiction, it seems that nobody besides me had heard of shaggy dog stories or tall tales (is nobody up on their Mark Twain?!!!), & everybody spent an incredible lot of time trying to discern what in my story was the external conflict & what was the internal conflict.

Uh… guys?  This is a story I thought up when I was stoned.

But I think it’s a pretty fun story.  So as I begin to add some of my older writings to my website-in-the-process-of-being-refurbished, I thought this would be a good choice to feature first.

It’s not in this blog post: as a short story, I thought it deserved its own permanent static website page.  But if you read it & enjoy it (okay, even if you don’t), I hope you’ll come back to this blog post & comment on it. (Unless of course you don’t like it because you’re a homophobe or “Truth is not Hate” hatespeech-maker, in which case just keep your opinions to yourself, thanks, since damned if I’ll approve ’em anyway.)

How to Find Your True Love: A Method (click through)

A couple of historical notes: the bar in the story, Le Pub, is modeled on the Village Lounge & Disco, a popular Anchorage queer bar of the 1980s that I used to spend a lot of time at — same bar, in fact, featured in my poem “Love at Le Pub” which I guess I’m gonna have to post since it’s not posted yet.  You’ll also find featured here Fur Rondy, snowshoe softball, a People Mover bus stop, & Larry Allen of Anchorage Tattoo Studio, who was the artist on both my tattoos.  This one was done over the summer of 1985, & still just as colorful as when it was made.  Thanks Larry!

Fireweed tattoo

Posted in Short fiction | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on How to Find Your True Love: A Method

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-27

  • Nyah nyah didn't snow last night like the weather people said. #
  • Snow forecast above the 1200-foot level. Just hold off until I can get my tires changed, please? #
  • WHY SARAH QUIT: Palin claims $1.25 million book "retainer" fee in financial disclosure documents released today. http://bit.ly/30SA6Z #
Posted in The Daily Tweets | Comments Off on The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-27

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-26

  • Scary that the president of a statewide university system has his interest "peaked." Uh, Gen. Hamilton, sir: it's "piqued." #
  • Supposed to snow tonight. Bleh. #
Posted in The Daily Tweets | Comments Off on The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-26

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-23

  • RT @Dichenlachman: Dollhouse is trending !!!! / & well it should! You were great tonight! #
  • Learning the delights of MobileMe. Me likes cloud computing. #
Posted in The Daily Tweets | 2 Comments

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-22

Ran into my blogger buddy Heather Aronno when I had to run some fliers for the Women in Policing event over to the Student Union today.

Ran into my blogger buddy Heather Aronno when I had to run some fliers for the Women in Law Enforcement recruitment event over to the Student Union today.

  • Tribal sovereignty: AK tribes have jurisdiction over their own kids in child welfare cases — as it should be! http://bit.ly/1deZPY #
  • A good word for GCI, which reactivated my phone/internet tho I could only pay most not all of my bill today. (Remainder tomorrow.) Thx GCI! #
Posted in The Daily Tweets | Tagged , | Comments Off on The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-22

Crossed Genres LGBTQ issue: The ad goes live


Crossed Genres Issue 12, the LGBTQ issue, goes live on November 1.

And I’m in it. Woohoo!  My short story “Cold,” about two young women on a planet in the late stages of terraforming, will appear on page… — well, I don’t know what page it’ll be on.  But it’ll be in the printed issue, & on the Crossed Genres website too.  Along with some other really good stories & artwork, like the artwork above which comes from the issue’s cover.

But while I’m really happy about being published in it, & will keep bragging it up in other posts, that’s not my primary purpose with this post.

The opposite of homophobia is…

On September 1, in one of two posts I wrote in celebration of Outer Alliance Pride Day, I wrote a post called “Queer eye for the sci-fi (& fantasy): LGBTA writers & homophobia” about antigay prejudice in the world of science fiction & fantasy. It was a homophobic rant by Nebula-award nominated John C. Wright that prompted the founding of the Outer Alliance in the first place.  (I also talked about Orson Scott Card.) [Ref #1]

Less than two weeks later, in a post called “Cold, Crossed Genres, & Flash homophobia”, I wrote about another instance of homophobia in the SF/F world: the refusal by Jake Freivald, editor of Flash Fiction Online, to accept Crossed Genres‘ ad calling for submissions to the LGBTQ issue (yes, this same issue that’s about to be published, with me in it) because that editor doesn’t accept “sexually themed ads” — & to him, anything with LGBTQ content was “sexually themed.”  Which is not the last thing Jake Freivald said that made a lot of people including me to rate him as homophobic, even if Frievald himself still claimes to “like” the gay people he knows. [Ref #2]

… welcoming.

There was a lot of reaction to the FFO editor’s action once it became known.  I write some about that in that post too.

But here’s something I didn’t mention:

Shortly after Bart Leib on Crossed Genres‘ blog & Outer Alliance posted about FFO as a queer-unfriendly market [Refs #3–4], Bart Leib was approached by Pablo Defendini of Tor.com.  Tor.com is the community site associated with Tor Books, one of the biggest publishers in science fiction/fantasy.  Defendini wrote about FFO’s rejection of the ad:

We find this attitude reprehensible, and would like to do our part in disabusing the public at large of the notion that the SF/F community is not LGBTQ-friendly. Tor.com would be more than happy to host your ad for the LBGTQ issue for free, for a period of, say, two or three weeks leading into the publication of the issue on 01 November? [Ref #5]

The ad at the top of this page went live on Tor.com yesterday. Now, & for the next couple of weeks, it appears as a banner ad on the very top of Tor’s home page (you might have to refresh the screen a few times, as the Crossed Genres‘ ad alternates with other ads placed there).

Now, that might not seem like a big deal.  But it’s an unanticipated act of generosity & welcome not only to Crossed Genres‘ & its LGBTQ issue, but to LGBTQ & allied writers and readers as a whole, from one of SF/F’s top publishers.  Let Tor.com know your appreciation.

I also want to mention here that Crossed Genres isn’t an LGBTQ magazine.  It’s a science fiction/fantasy magazine — as it advertises itself, “science fiction & fantasy with a twist.”  But its also a member of the Outer Alliance, & while there’s only one LGBTQ issue (so far, anyway), they always welcome new submissions with LGBTQ themes, so long as those submissions also have elements of Crossed Genres’ current theme.  See the current genre page for details.

I’ve already been encouraging some of my friends who write good SF/F to think about submitting to Crossed Genres.  I’ll be doing it again myself.

References

  1. 9/1/09. “Queer eye for the sci-fi (& fantasy): LGBTA writers & homophobia” by Melissa S. Green (Henkimaa).
  2. 9/12/09. “Cold, Crossed Genres, & Flash homophobia” by Melissa S. Green (Henkimaa).
  3. 9/9/09.  “SFF market rejects our LGBTQ ad” by Bart Leib (Crossed Genres).
  4. 9/9/09. “Regarding queer-unfriendly markets” by mbranesf (Outer Alliance).
  5. 9/10/09. “Just keep your wide eyes wide wide open” by Barb Leib (Crossed Genres blog).
Posted in Cold, LGBTQA writers | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Crossed Genres LGBTQ issue: The ad goes live

The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-21

A late autumn sunset on my way home from work tonight

A late autumn sunset on my way home from work tonight

  • @JoeQualls [shrug] I’ve never made it a secret I can’t stand her. Take care. in reply to JoeQualls #
  • It’s almost Halloween! Time to encourage everyone to become diabetic by bringing candy to the office! (Truly: for me, this is not good.) #
  • Finally called dentist’s office on slow-to-heal gums after last Weds. dental appt. Better, but not fully healed. Waiting for call back. #
  • @jansonjones Uh oh. I don’t think I’m gonna invite you over for dinner anytime soon, zombie-man. #
  • RT: @crossedgenres ad for #LGBTQ issue is up on the http://tor.com website! Check out gorgeous cover art! THX @tordotcom! // & I’m in it! #
  • Reload http://tor.com until you see goregous @crossedgenres ad for #LGBTQ issue across top of page. Issue live on Nov. 1 – & I’m in it! Yay! #
  • Open letter to Blogger.com: I _still_ don’t know Arabic. Could I have my log-in page in English, please? #
Posted in The Daily Tweets | Comments Off on The Daily Tweets, 2009-10-21