Yesterday I read
an interview in Out Magazine with
alex_beecroft and
erastes--and a commentary on the interview
here.
I'm afraid that the interview and the commentary are not very accurate and are, in some ways, rather offensive. The Gawker article starts off this way:
It's a bit of a joke that straight guys are into "hot girl-on-girl action," but what's new is the
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Comments 41
You know, if I only wrote books based on my life and what I know, they would be incredibly boring books. I like my life. I'm happy. But let's face it- it just doesn't make for super scintillating reading :)
(The lack of length in this comment is brought to you by me trying to finish up an epic in a spaceship that involves people being mindwiped and a robot struggling with questions of free will. Because isn't that more interesting than reading about trying to make two kids eat their quesidillas? Yeah, I think so.)
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I'd read it and I don't even know BSG!
(And I'm in the middle of a crossover involving robots and political intrigue. It bears no resemblance to my life, but my life is pretty dull. Even the crises are not especially interesting. Which is okay. I don't want interesting crises. I don't want crises at all.)
And oh yeah. VERY offensive and the reporter wouldn't change a thing even when Alex and Erastes asked her to.
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And robots and political intrigue sound exciting :)
What amazes me is how much the interviewer missed. I haven't read Alex's or Erastes' books, but I've read other books with gay heroes and I write a LOT of slash. And my frustration with that interview is that there's so much about being gay in terms of historical context and how you relate to society. For me, that's what actually makes the whole story interesting. Sure, sex can be hot and I'm not going to deny I enjoy reading it. But sex doesn't make a character, and the sex becomes hot because you care about these characters and their stories and their lives.
I also got the impression that the interviewer was really trying to shoehorn all M/M writers into one sexuality, and that sexuality was... I don't want to say "wrong," because I don't want to imply that I'm saying a sexuality is wrong. But the two women interviewed seemed to have similar approaches ( ... )
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Hell, yeah. I'm more interested in the story you're writing than making quesadillas -- even spicy ones!
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Well quite. You can almost see the untyped "weirdos" on the end of it.
I mentioned this on Erastes LJ too, but the use of "obsessed" in the Gawker article bugs the hell out of me. Seems like women can't just be interested in something, you know, with their intellect. No, they're "obsessed", implying irrationality. Women, see, we're all a bit crazeeee. Must be our hormones.
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I stopped making assumption about women and why they read/write slash or m/m romance, the day a little old lady and I had a discussion about Suze Brockmann's books featuring a gay couple. She looked at me with a twinkle in her eye when I told her that that particular book did feature some discreet, gay sex. She said, "Oh, I think Jules and Robin are hot! I nearly fell over ( ... )
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YES. THIS.
I would tell the interviewer (who is a dreadful writer, BTW), to stop trying to analyze in order to create sensationalism, and work on his own skills. And just because you don't understand something doesn't mean it's bent.
Wilson seems to make a habit of vilifying subjects of her articles.
I was insulted on all levels, as a writer, as a woman, as a reader, by the tone of the interview. What a putz!
A-fucking-MEN. Perfect description.
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Hmm.
She needs to practice a little bit, maybe.
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