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!

 

 

Atlantis series coming to BBC

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Now this is really cool news. BBC is producing a fantasy series based on the legend of Atlantis. Atlantis will be a thirteen x forty-five minute episode mini-series. It’s scheduled for broadcast in the fall.

Here’s the blurb that was released on Telly Surfer:

The city of Atlantis is a mysterious, ancient place: a world of bull leaping, of snake haired goddesses and of palaces so vast it was said they were build by giants. It’s into this strange, compelling realm tha the young Jason arrives and a amazing adventure begins, bringing to life the vast store of Greek myths and legends re-imagined in 45 minute episodes for a new generation.

According to BroadcastNow.co.uk, Atlantis will be picked up by BBC Worldwide for international viewers. I hope that means we’ll be able to see it in the US soon!

This, along with my previous note about T.A. Barron’s upcoming Atlantis book, gives me great hope that 2013 will be a big year for rekindled interest in Atlantis, including my YA novel The Seventh Pleiade.

BBC previously aired an Atlantis movie Atlantis End of a World, Birth of a Legend in 2010. I didn’t catch it, but it’s described as a historical drama based on the theory that a volcanic eruption near Crete (the destruction of the Ancient Minoans) was the source of the story. I posted the movie trailer below.

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The Next Big Thing: C.A. Clemmings

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I’m posting the on-line interview from my final Next Big Thing taggee.

I met C.A. Clemmings at Absolute Write about two years ago, and our exchange about the challenges faced by LGBT writers turned into a long-term camaraderie. We frequently critique each other’s work and provide encouragement for our respective writing journeys.

Meet literary fictionista C.A. Clemmings!

Writer C.A. Clemmings

 

What is the title of the book?

I have a novella and a short story currently in progress. The title of my novella is Rebirth, and the title of my short story is “Placencia.”

Where did the idea come from for the book?

For Rebirth I drew inspiration from Bad Girls, the TV series about women in prison. Since my ideas originate with character, however, I wanted to write about a woman who comes out of that kind of environment and to examine how she rediscovers and redefines herself in society.

“Placencia” was supposed to be a fun, easy project. It was an attempt to take a “vacation” from the extensive work that goes into longer projects. Turns out it takes just as much effort for me to produce a short story.

What genre does your book fall under?

Literary Fiction 

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition? 

I had not given much thought to this, and when I did, I found it difficult to select the right actresses who could embody my characters. I think I will leave up to readers to shape the characters with their own imagination.

What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?

Rebirth is about Nicolette, a young ex-convict who goes to live on ranch that once belonged to her deceased parents, and ends up acquiring a racehorse and an attractive female jockey who convinces her to get into the horseracing business, which inadvertently unearths Nicolette’s parents’ shady past.

“Placencia” is a about a woman who, while on her way to meet her girlfriend for their vacation together in Honduras gets thrown off-course and ends up in Placencia, Belize, where she is tempted by an alluring woman and encounters a fisherman who is a haunting reminder of the father she’s never met.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

The first drafts of both Rebirth and “Placencia” were completed in a few months, however the process of transforming them into their current versions took considerably longer.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?

In general, I am inspired to tell stories about ordinary people with an enigmatic quality. For Rebirth, I was inspired to write about a woman who had lost nearly everything and had been stripped down to her “flinching muscles.” I wanted to rebuild her and bring color back to her life.

“Placencia” was born out of the idea of taking a vacation away from the things that we obsess over in our daily lives such as work, relationships, and our families. However, interestingly enough for my main character Elodie, Placencia becomes the place where she finds herself confronted by the things that burden and haunt her: the tremendous fog of failure and the potential for failure that seems to envelope her, and the unresolved issues that stem from not being given an opportunity to know her father. The impact of this is depicted in Elodie’s aimless spirit. I enjoyed writing Placencia because it allowed me to explore this flawed and self-absorbed woman, who at the end of the day is good-hearted and makes the right decisions.

Is your book out in print, upcoming from a publisher and/or represented by an agency?

Rebirth and “Placencia” will be self-published in the spring.

For more about Clemmings and her projects, visit her website.

Hop Against Homophobia and Transphobia!

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Hop Against Homophobia and TransphobiaI will be participating in this event, which was launched last year by M/M authors in honor of the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

The goal is to fight prejudice and discrimination everywhere, including in the literary community. Here is the mission statement from HAHAT’s website:

The mission of Hop Against Homophobia and Transphobia is to spread awareness of homophobic and transphobic discrimination by expressing ourselves and get readers from within our own genres involved. Furthermore, we are here to stand together as an LGBTQ writer community against discrimination of our books.

Authors, publishers and reviewers of LGBT, M/M and F/F literature can participate by promoting the event on their blogs. For more information, check out the official website: Hop Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

Jaguars!!

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Cats are a source of inspiration for my writing. The jaguar in particular plays a major role in my upcoming Werecat: The Rearing.

Thus, I couldn’t resist some recent news and pics.

Jaguar cub

Photo retrieved from Zooborns.com and courtesy of Brevard, FL Zoo

This jaguar cub was born on January 26th, and is pretty damn adorable. All jaguars are born with spots and blue eyes. Even those that grow up to be “black”  retain spots on their undercoat that can be seen in certain lighting. As jaguars mature, their eyes may become coppery brown, orange, yellow or green. You can read the full article on Brevard’s jaguar cub here.

Jaguars are the only New World cat that roars. In terms of ancestry, they have more in common with Old World cats like African leopards and lions than the American cougar or ocelot.

Their habitat in the South American rain forest has been greatly reduced by deforestation, and the jaguar is considered an endangered species.

Here’s a short video from international news group AFP about jaguar conservation in Brazil.

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I tried to find video of the short news segment I recently saw with footage of a trap, collar and release of a 210 pound jaguar named Xango. It doesn’t appear to be on YouTube. If anyone has a link, please share it with me.

Here’s an article about the operation from Agence France Press: “Mission to save jaguar exposes big cat’s plight in Brazil.”