Happy Birthday, Charles Dickens!

Here’s the man to blame for starting my obsession with classic lit, historical fiction, historical fantasy, what have you. :)

Charles Dickens 200th Birthday Google Doodle

A Tale of Two Cities was the first Dickens novel I read when I was in high school, and I wouldn’t have even heard about it had I not stumbled across a movie adaptation of the book on TV. I remember not only being fascinated by the costumes but also developing a schoolgirl crush on the characters of both Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton. Unsurprisingly, they look alike, so you can’t really blame me. :D It wasn’t till I was in college, when I reread the novel with a more critical eye, when I realized that it was Sydney I should swoon over and not Darnay. Both times, I was a sobbing mess at the end of the novel.

A Tale of Two Cities Illustration by Ralph Bruce

To me the biggest influence that Dickens has in my own work has always been writing memorable characters. I know for a fact that I’m nowhere near his level of creativity and skill, but it’s definitely something I work hard to achieve, regardless of what story I write. Quirky characters, especially, are a bit difficult to create (they have to be unique and cockeyed enough to up the interest levels) and “maintain” throughout a novel-length work (they have to be consistent in their cockeyed-ness), but the final results are well worth all that grief. Again, I don’t think I’ve written any character that comes close to any of Dickens’, but the challenge is always there. And I’ve always considered that to be one of the most fun goals I give myself whenever I begin a new story.

Speaking of writing, I’m just about halfway through Dr. Morbid’s Castle of Blood (or Masks #6). The novel’s coming along pretty well, though I’m finding myself second-guessing this story’s plot more than I did with Mimi Attacks! The circumstances of Eric and the superheroes’ adventures aren’t the same; in this new book, they’re trapped, which means very limited action and setting. In Mimi Attacks!, their adventures are pretty much the standard supervillain-versus-superhero kind of thing. So there’s a bit of nervousness and occasional angst-ridden moments of writerly nail-biting throughout the writing process for Dr. Morbid, and I hope I’m able to pull this through without a hitch.

Releasing two Masks novels in a row earns me a break from writing contemporary fiction after Dr. Morbid, and I’ve been refining the story outline and notes that I scribbled in my writing journal for that French historical fantasy novel I talked about before. Following that, I need to turn my attention back to contemporary fantasy again, but not in the Masks universe. I’m still trying to find a new story (series, maybe) that would serve as a complement to Masks and maybe a replacement down the line when I get tired of writing about superheroes. I certainly can’t see myself writing about Eric for more than ten books, and in fact, I didn’t expect to go beyond five volumes overall. But in this series’ case, it’s good to simply go with the flow as inspiration dictates. If and when I write the final book, it’s not going to be an end-end, if you know what I mean. It’ll remain open-ended to show that Eric’s adventures are ongoing even after the curtain closes. I hate goodbyes, anyway. I’d rather have the gang continue the good fight and end the series that way.

And now I’m starting to bum myself out by thinking about it. One day at a time, dahlink. One day at a time.

Now Available: Out of the Depths (And Some Goodies)

Heads up! My short story, “Out of the Depths”, is now available from Queerteen Press in e-book format (note: short stories are only available in e-book format). In brief, it’s a horror / gothic retelling of the “Pygmalion” myth.

Blurb: It has been a year since Konstancji’s lover passed away, but rather than move on with his life, Konstancji hires one young man after another to sit for him as he obsessively works on a statue. What’s apparent is the fact that each sitter dies and is replaced with a new one, his grieving family compensated generously.

What no one’s aware of, though, is the purpose of the statue, which is the means through which Konstancji hopes to bring his beloved back from the dead.

If you purchase directly from the publisher, you’ll receive a 20% discount. Go here to buy it as well as to read an excerpt if you want to get an idea of the piece’s tone and style.

And some extra bits of news!

     

“The Knight”, a short story due out in March, is now listed at Queerteen Press. It’s a retelling of the “St. George and the Dragon” legend, and you can read the story’s description and an excerpt over here. And then there’s Mimi Attacks!, the next book in the Masks series (this is book number five), which is all about superheroes, supervillains, crazed fangirls, and a sixteen-year-old boy who always ends up with the short end of the stick. Book blurb and excerpt can be found here. Since this is a novel, it’ll be available in both print and e-book formats.

There you have it! And if you purchase a copy of “Out of the Depths”, I hope you enjoy it. :) It’s the only horror story in the collection of short fiction that I’ve contracted with Queerteen Press.

Geeking Out Over Ghosts

This post is brought to you courtesy of my recent revisiting of Susan Hill’s The Woman in Black. I reread that novel because of the upcoming Hammer Film adaptation. When I first saw the film’s trailer several weeks ago, I was elated. I love the book, and while I enjoyed the 1989 film version – which I watched before reading Hill’s novel for the first time – I saw that the changes they made in the story pretty much undermined what I felt was the book’s brilliance in its subtle buildup of terror. The following scene, for instance, is and isn’t in the novel. There’s the ghost, there’s Kipps, and they’re in an old, abandoned graveyard; that’s the extent of the similarities between the novel and the film for this scene.

The novel is very much a classic ghost story. You’ve got a haunted house, a tragic back story, a ghost driven by bitter anger and revenge – everything pretty much spells out “cliché” in that sense, but Susan Hill did so for a reason:

In 1982, I decided I wanted to try and write a full length ghost story in the traditional English style. I made a list of ‘ingredients’ – I don`t often write in this very conscious way but it was necessary here.

Ingredients included
1. A ghost… not a monster or a thing from outer space but the ghost of a human who was once alive and is known to have died but whose recognisable form re-appears – or occasionally is not seen but heard, or possibly even smelled.
2. The haunted house… usually isolated.
3. Weather… atmospheric weather conditions – fog, mist, snow, and of course moonlit darkness on clear nights.
4. A sceptic. A narrator or central character who begins as a sceptic or plain disbeliever and scoffer but who is gradually converted by what he or she sees and experiences of ghostly presences.

But all this, fun though it might be, was not quite enough for me as I like to have a moral point or purpose in a story.

The point about The Woman In Black is that revenge can never be good, can never succeed ultimately, will never pay. ‘Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord. I will repay.’ Justice is one thing, revenge is very different.

I also believe that after experiencing great distress or grief, a terrible life-experience, a person must eventually – though it may take a long time – leave it to rest and move on. The ghost in THE WOMAN IN BLACK goes on and on wreaking revenge on the innocent for what has happened to her, even after death. She has never let go, can never move on. As she could not in life, so she cannot after life. Read more*

* This quote used to be posted over at Susan Hill’s site, but the page has been taken down.

She set out to write the novel a certain way, and she certainly succeeded. I wrote a brief review of the book over at Goodreads over here. I could’ve written more, but it’s late, and I need to go to bed.

When I first saw the trailer for the new film, I was excited, but now that I’ve just reread the book, I can’t help but feel a little nervous as well. Just from the trailer alone, I can see a number of changes that’ve been made, the most worrisome for me being that message on the wall (“You could have saved him”). Spoiler alert: that’s not in the novel, and the ghost never communicates with Kipps in any way. I can only hope that whatever changes are made to the story, they’ll enhance it in some way or another, not just superficially add to the horror elements through more obvious scare tactics. Hill’s novel is very subtle; the movie doesn’t appear to be so.

Boy, Do I Wish It

I don’t know about you guys, but I’m just dying to see these movies:

Can you imagine a similar story with an LGBT kid in the main role? I sure can. Pretty easily, in fact.

Ditto with historical ghost fiction. Boy, do these trailers get me all worked up for new stories. If anything, they remind me just how important writing genre fiction for LGBT kids is, with the need to show just how normal the target audience is and that there’s simply no reason for them not to be represented in fiction outside stories that center on their sexual orientation.

Oh, and as a cool addendum, Nicole posted the following link in her comment to my previous post: a list of historical YA fiction with LGBT characters. Go check out the books!

Pimpage!

Things have been fairly busy over here, and I decided to compile recent activities in one post (which makes sense because I hate turning my blog into one giant marketing machine for my books).

Firstly, Lee Wind posted an entry for Renfred’s Masquerade over at his blog, and if you’ve already read the novel, feel free to share your thoughts about it (or a full-on review) as a comment.

Secondly, Top 2 Bottom Reviews posted their thoughts on the book, and I must admit to getting rather emotional about it when I first read their review:

This is not a story of romance as much as it is an exposition of a boy who becomes a young man and learns a valuable lesson in the transformative power of love. He learns that the value of a man is what is beneath the façade, that what lurks in the heart and mind is far more powerful than what is visible on the surface. Read more

I normally don’t get worked up over positive reviews of my books, but considering the weight that I’ve been lugging around with me since I started writing genre LGBT YA fiction, it was a review that me glad that I write historical fantasy for gay kids. I don’t know if anyone out there does, as most of the other LGBT YA writers of genre fiction I know focus on contemporary magical realism for their novels (which I’m dying to read, BTW), and I hope someone’s trying to do the same. It’s really unfortunate that historical fiction in the LGBT YA market remains the red-headed stepchild, and it can be really, really frustrating for someone like me.

Thirdly, I have a guest post up at Patricia Lynne’s blog, which pretty much goes over my writing philosophy and why I write what I write despite the fact that genre fiction will never really enjoy the respect that contemporary issues-based fiction enjoy.