Two Boys Kissing: Cover Art for David Levithan’s Upcoming Release

Cover art from David Levithan's Two Boys Kissing

Retrieved from Entertainment Weekly’s ‘Shelf Life’ blog

I caught this bit of news while researching review blogs for my upcoming releases. This makes me happy on a bunch of levels.

David Levithan is a hugely talented author who helped bring a wave of LGBT fiction to young adult readers in the new millennium,  along with authors like Peter Cameron, Malinda Lo and Alex Sanchez. I really enjoyed Levithan’s near-future, political drama Wide Awake, and his titles are always fluttering around my reading queue. With so many fantasy books for me to catch up on, I just haven’t had the time to read more of his work. But Two Boys Kissing, with its groundbreaking cover will definitely be purchased by me.

To my knowledge (and please correct me if I’m wrong), it’s the first young adult book with a same-sex kiss on its cover, for a traditionally-published title and/or for a title from an author who writes mainstream, literary fiction.

So yeah, there’s some qualifications there, and I don’t mean to suggest it’s less important that small press or indie or young adult-romance authors/publishers may have portrayed same-sex love just as explicitly on their book covers prior to Levithan’s book.

In fact, here’s one recent kissing cover I retrieved from a search of Bold Strokes Books’ young adult Soliloquy imprint. It’s from an anthology of gay romance stories.

Cover art for Boys of Summer, edited by Steve Berman

Retrieved from Bold Strokes Books webstore

The mainstream publishing industry is inherently more conservative and resistant to change. That’s why I think it’s a bold and an important move by Levithan and his publisher Knopf Books to feature a photo of two boys kissing on Levithan’s book cover. It breaks what feels like a perennial double standard.

While young adult books are sensibly less sexually-graphic than adult books in terms of cover art, boy-girl kisses don’t raise much of a ruckus; and really, what’s the matter with portraying an innocent kiss?

A quick survey of some upcoming young adult releases turned up this cover from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Cover art from Alexandra Coutts' Tumble & Fall

Retrieved from GoodReads

Not quite a kiss perhaps, but the suggestion is pretty apparent, and it’s hardly making Entertainment Weekly news for pushing boundaries within young adult lit. (There are  a ton of boy-girl kisses on young adult romance book covers, but I wanted to go with a more contemporary, literary title comparable to Levithan’s Two Boys Kissing).

I hope the cover for Two Boys Kissing will usher in a trend of more romantic LGBT-young adult cover art. I think about my own experience searching for books about gay teens way back when I was coming out, and wondering if other people like me existed, and if romantic love was possible between two boys. It took a lot of guesswork browsing libraries and bookstores, wondering if a slightly fey or troubled-looking guy on the cover might mean that there was a story in there that related to me. I think it’s a huge sign of progress that our stories no longer have to be coded and tragic.

There’s an interesting story on the making of the cover for Two Boys Kissing. You can read about it in Entertainment Weekly’s article here.

Do you have a favorite young adult same-sex kissing cover you want to share? Let me know, and I will happily post it!

 

 

SAVE THE DATE: Rainbow Book Fair April 13th

I am excited (and just a wee bit terrified) to announce that I will be doing a short reading from my upcoming novel The Seventh Pleiade, as part of a panel of Bold Strokes Books authors at the Fifth Annual New York Rainbow Book Fair.

New York Rainbow Book Fair

 

 

 

 

The Bold Strokes Authors Panel is from 2:00-2:40pm.

Come on down to hear me read! Friendly faces in the crowd will be much appreciated.

For information about the Rainbow Book Fair, including a list of exhibitors and a schedule of events, click here.

 

The Seventh Pleiade sold to Bold Strokes Books

Good news sometimes comes in rushes. Although, truthfully, I’ve been holding onto this item until the publisher’s official press release came out.

My young adult fantasy The Seventh Pleiade has been picked up by Bold Strokes Books!!

The Seventh Pleiade is the story of a gay teen who becomes a hero during the last days of Atlantis. There’s a back cover blurb and my author bio up on Bold Strokes’ website. Bold Strokes Books is the premier publisher of LGBT fiction. I am absolutely, positively over the moon about this!!

There’s a long production schedule ahead, but as things move along, I’ll be proudly sharing the cover art here and information about advance sales and promotional events. The book is scheduled for release on November 18, 2013.

Yes, there will be a RELEASE PARTY! More details on that later.

Sighted in the Blogosphere

I thought I’d share some interesting stuff I landed upon recently while bouncing around the blogosphere.

Bold Strokes Books Authors’ Blog has the prolific and multi-awarded mystery and romance author Radclyffe talking about her latest release Crossroads (Bold Strokes Books, November 2012).

I’m a big fan of gay mysteries, and Drewey Wayne Gunn’s weekly GunnShots column at Lambda Literary picks out Gunn’s Ten Favorite Gay Mystery Series and Ten Favorite Stand-Alones.

The titles span six decades, and the list includes my all time favorite: Michael Nava’s Henry Rios series, as well as R.D. Zimmerman’s Todd Mills series, which I enjoyed a lot.

Finally, writer Melissa Deluca is recounting her travels and her work with girls forced into sex trafficking in Kolcata, India through her blog: “Finding my ‘I’ in India.”  She shares beautiful and profound photography and journal-entry style posts.

Greg Herren’s SLEEPING ANGEL

I’ve been on a review kick lately. It’s a nice departure from my fiction projects now and then, and it gives me a chance to talk up queer-themed lit that may get overlooked elsewhere.

This week: Greg Herren’s young adult-mystery SLEEPING ANGEL (Bold Strokes Books, 2011).

The story has a terrific premise: Eric, a high school football hero and Junior Prom King, wakes up from a coma to find out he’s the only person who can solve a murder he remembers nothing about. He was pulled from a car wreck with a classmate in the backseat. The classmate Sean had a bullet in him, and he didn’t survive the car crash.

Eric has total amnesia.

The portrayal of Eric early on was one of my favorites parts of the book. Eric is panicked and confused. He knows he should feel something for the people who are worried about him, like his mom, but he can’t. He searches for clues about what kind of person he was. Amnesia can be a convenient mystery plot device, but here it’s a departure point for a multi-dimensional journey of discovery.

One discovery is Eric’s brain injury somehow gave him the ability to hear people’s thoughts when he touches them. Those interactions, revealing what’s really on the minds of his family and friends, are nice, intriguing moments. They shed light on Eric’s character and keep the story moving forward.

We find out the deceased Sean was gay and being bullied at school. Eric was one of his tormenters. The history between the two places Eric as a prime suspect in Sean’s murder, and Eric can’t say whether he did or didn’t do it.

It’s an interesting approach to the subject of teen homophobia. Amnesiac Eric – removed from social pressure and the attitudes of his peers – can’t understand why he would kill or even dislike Sean just because he was gay. Eric is ashamed when he hears from other people, and starts remembering himself, how he treated Sean.

With all those narrative hooks, and Herren’s tight, fast-paced writing, I sped through the story to the end. Eric finds a Facebook message from Sean asking him to a confidential meeting just before the car accident, and I was dying to know what the meeting was about and who shot Sean.

I’ll be judicious, and just say another nice aspect of the story is the build-up of various suspects. What could’ve been a heavy-handed lesson about the treatment of gay teens becomes richer through the range of people in Eric’s life. I liked especially Eric’s younger brother Danny who is full of rage and hurt because Eric is perceived as the perfect son.

I went back and forth about what it meant to take the story from Eric’s perspective versus Sean’s. It felt at times that All-American hetero Eric didn’t deserve to be the story’s hero just by virtue of becoming enlightened about his bad behavior through this scary episode in his otherwise privileged life. In fact, Eric expresses as much, which earns him some self-awareness points, but Sean, for whom there was much more at stake in the story, was more interesting and likeable to me.

Overall though, SLEEPING ANGEL is a satisfying mystery with very clever storytelling approaches.