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rydra_wong Genreville:
"The agent offered to sign us on the condition that we make the gay character straight, or else remove his viewpoint and all references to his sexual orientation." Let me just repeat that:
The agent offered to sign us on the condition that we make the gay character straight, or else remove his viewpoint and all references to his
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I suppose it's not possible to name this bigoted arsehole? Because they seriously deserve never to work again.
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But the fact that other agents are doing the same thing implicitly doesn't make it any better.
The implicit ones are probably worse in their way of course, since they're doing the same thing but less obviously so it's more insidious - they none of them ought to be allowed to continue what they're doing.
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I'd say that the agent who was explicit about this should be regarded higher than the ones who aren't. "Love the book, but as it is I can't sell it, and this is why." He or she might be wrong, there might be a huge unfulfilled demand for YA fiction with gay protagonists, but I suspect not.
Most of the ire should be directed at the publishers, I feel. If they would love to see more YA with good gays, they've failed to let the agents know. I suspect the publishers in general refer to not have gay protagonists, especially in USA, since that makes life less complicated for them.
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I've linked to this article too.
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