What the fuckity-snacks is wrong with you, dude?
Sorry, let me back up.
Earlier today I got a bit of hate mail — though I guess hate mail is strong, as the writer of said email was not like, threatening to murder me with a brick or anything — from what appears to be a male, adult reader of my young adult series. In particular, he read the third book in the series, which came out last week: The Harvest.
I won’t reprint the email here, but he said, and I quote, “I didn’t like that you had a main gay character reviling [sic] in a homosexual sexual relationship.” (Reveling, I guess he means?) He feels I “corrupted” the book with the presence of “gay male relationships.” He then added that he feels I was jumping on some kind of “bandwagon,” which I assume (he did not clarify) means that I was doing this to fill some kind of diversity bingo card. Finally, he concluded that it “didn’t matter” or “effect [sic] the story” that the character was gay so why include it at all?
Here is my response that I won’t actually bother sending to him, but maybe he’ll read it here:
Dear Pouty McGee:
Thank you for reading my book. That’s nice of you.
I’m sorry* the book features gay characters who love each other and engage in sex. I suppose the more pleasing alternative to you would be for the characters to suffer in loveless abandonment and quietly pray to themselves while looking directly at heterosexual pornography, but that feels fucking goofy to me, so I didn’t write it that way.
I’d much rather write characters who are nuanced and complicated and who also are free to partake in the human spectrum of love and sex and sexuality (and their opposing sides which is betrayal and breakups and the loneliness that results).
I did not do this to jump on some kind of gay male bandwagon, though I would assume that a gay male bandwagon would be a lot of fun. I love both bands and wagons very much.
That said, while I do not subscribe to the notion of diversity bingo or writing books simply to fill some kind of imaginary social justice quota, I do like to think that it’s important to write books that feature people who aren’t me because I really, really hope that my readership is not just a room full of beardo white dudes with grumpy sourpuss faces staring at each other. Diversity matters to my readership, and I don’t mean that in a salacious “equates-to-sales” way, but rather in a, “equates-to-acknowledging-the-vast-complexity-of-the-humans-who-exist-around-us” kinda way. I also think it’s vital to read books that aren’t by people like me so that my own perspective is opened up. You should try that. Maybe you thought because I looked like you in some way we shared a certain bigoted point-of-view, like how sometimes white guys go up to other white guys and then say racist or misogynist stuff thinking that our whitemaleness is enough of a self-selected symbol, like it’s basically an invisible Swastika or Confederate Flag imperceptibly branded across our foreheads to indicate a shared social shittiness.
I did not write the character into the story because he affects the story, but at the same time, he does reflect it — the Heartland begins as a world where teenagers are forced to marry each other, and that means very explicitly that the Empyrean government enforces heterosexual couplings and nothing else. Which is a pretty horrible place to be as a person who isn’t heterosexual like, say, how America was just a few short months and years ago. Also, is gayness supposed to be a “plot point” if the character features? Is that essential? Why does that not apply to straight people? Why weren’t you mad that the character’s straightness didn’t matter and affect the story? And how exactly is that supposed to happen? The bad guys build a machine meant to run on one kind of sexual orientation or another? “BRING ME MORE GAYNESS THE MACHINE MUST FEED.”
I think your complaints are weird. What the hell, man. What the hell. Maybe you’re a parent, and that’s what this is? Certainly a lot of the complaints I receive from the readers of my YA work are from adults who have teenagers. These parents tend to be mad because I acknowledge that teenagers sometimes (gasp, I know) have sex and do drugs and say naughty words. One reviewer once said that teenagers, carte blanche, don’t say bad words. Like it’s never happened in the history of teenagerdom. But ignorance of teen habits is how you get abstinence training which is how you get pregnant teenagers and bad MTV reality shows about those pregnant teenagers. Teaching abstinence is like telling people not to ever get in a car (ever!) instead of teaching them where the fucking seatbelts are. Either way, your kids will not be harmed by fictional exposure to gayness, or gay sex, or bad words, or sex in general, or drugs, or any of that. I got bad news, Jack — your kids go to school and live in the world and that means they’re in the middle of it. That’s just how it is. Better to lend narrative context instead of pretending it doesn’t exist.
Your teenagers are probably socially way ahead of you, by the way.
Is it just that you think two dudes making out is gross and weird? Because that’s gross and weird if you think that. Don’t be gross and weird. Be awesome and cool instead.
Oh, and as a sidenote, you’re on the third book of a series and this character isn’t new, so…? The whole gay thing has kinda been in there since the first book. (Not to mention: the book is filled with violence and yet, none of that seemed to bother you at all. Ah, Puritanical handwaving. Violence is cool. Love is bad. Good times.) How’d you get here? There were signs. Big gay signs. That had to be a willful choice on your part, or you don’t know how to count. If it’s the former, then I ask again: what the hell? If it’s the latter, I remind you: it’s 1 then 2 then 3, not 3 then 2 then 1. I’ll let my four year old teach you about counting and I think I’ll also let him tell you about loving consensual relationships between adults of any stripe because he literally has no idea that any of this is wrong and in fact I’m pretty sure he doesn’t even notice at all.
Anyway, thanks for reading! Here is a picture of a cuddly pug** to help soothe you.
*not sorry
**not a photo of a cuddly pug
yahalomi65 says:
Such people are so narrow minded.
July 22, 2015 — 9:17 PM
Cyr says:
First, well said and your books look rather interesting and I’m gonna go read one now. Second, I quite like cuddly pugs; do you have any more to share with us? ;-D
July 22, 2015 — 9:25 PM
Eric Trautmann says:
I think “The Machine Must Feed” should be a t-shirt. 10/10, Would Wear.
July 22, 2015 — 9:34 PM
pwodoom says:
It saddens me to learn the Village People are forced to use a wagon instead of a tour bus like other bands.
July 22, 2015 — 9:45 PM
Luna says:
*snerk* You made me choke on my pretzels!
July 24, 2015 — 10:44 AM
chrismcmullen says:
Those are really cool covers. I like the style. 🙂 (I’d be happy to write a post featuring those covers as inspiration for aspiring authors, if you wouldn’t mind…)
July 22, 2015 — 9:53 PM
Elodie Pritchartt says:
I stumbled on your blog with StumbleUpon. I’ve not yet read any of your books, but after reading your posts — and this one in particular — I will be picking up a few copies shortly. This was one awesome post. Thanks.
July 22, 2015 — 9:54 PM
Sophist123 says:
Those things we least like in other people are those things we see in ourselves. Pouty McGee obviously needs to come out of the closet.
July 22, 2015 — 9:55 PM
K says:
Many thanks for your cuddly pug pic. 🙂 hot. Oh and the post was good too.
July 22, 2015 — 10:44 PM
Elian Ceri Eustace says:
So, my lovely partner mentioned you to me, as in “He reminds me of an older bearded male you.” and then read me a few of your rambles. I will now be following your blog and twitter and buying your books. Thank you for being so out spoken and awesome.
July 22, 2015 — 10:50 PM
terribleminds says:
*hands you honorary beard*
July 23, 2015 — 6:59 AM
Jack Blackthorn says:
That was awesome! I’ve never read any of your books, but I’m definitely going to now. Your response to Pouty McGee is a work of beauty. And yes, I also appreciate the “cuddly pug” picture.
July 22, 2015 — 11:25 PM
manifenestration says:
THUNDEROUS APPLAUSE.
Thank you.
July 22, 2015 — 11:46 PM
paigevest says:
Nice. I’m glad to see that I wasn’t the only one clapping as I read this post. And especially when I clicked on the link to the image that was most definitely not a cuddly pug. Were you also cackling like a maniac while you clapped? Because that made the clapping so much more fun… 😉
July 22, 2015 — 11:49 PM
paigevest says:
This post is made of awesome….
#captainobvious
July 22, 2015 — 11:47 PM
awaknee69 says:
Thank you! I will now pick up Book #1 and start reading your books. If you write a response this well, your books must be awesome! Love the cuddly pugs, btw. You rock!
July 23, 2015 — 12:23 AM
voxael says:
I’ve never understood exactly what sending these sorts of letters is supposed to achieve. Like, are you supposed to read this and go “Whoops, my bad” and then pull the books from all points of sale forever more?
Man, I’d love to have that kind of self-confidence – to be able to think “I don’t like this, the world must bend to my will!” but then again, I guess that’s why I’d never be one of your Dr. Dooms or your Lokis, even if someone were stupid enough to give me super powers.
July 23, 2015 — 12:42 AM
UrsulaV says:
They actually think that you will, yes.
I’m a children’s book author, and I once received a letter with attached spreadsheet of every time I had used “God” as an exclamation in the series (at that point about five books) along with a helpful suggestion about what it could be changed to in context. They assumed that I would be delighted to make these changes (and presumably was stopped only by lack of spreadsheet) and that the publisher would put them out the next time they went to press.
People do not understand how books work. At all.
July 23, 2015 — 1:10 PM
adaddinsane says:
He wouldn’t get past book 1 of my main series 🙂 but I can’t say why, it’s a plot point.
July 23, 2015 — 1:20 AM
deafbeg65 says:
Just for that I’ve purchased the first book in this series. I suspect I’ll buy the rest as well… Awesome, dude.
July 23, 2015 — 2:22 AM
Jayanthi says:
You rock, Chuck. And even though I have always preferred cats, I am SO going out right now to get myself some cuddly pugs.
July 23, 2015 — 2:52 AM
Arinn Dembo says:
LOL. The cuddly pug is what makes it.
July 23, 2015 — 3:19 AM
Jesterfest says:
I recently started reading YA fiction as it was suggested that I would have a mind to write in the genre and should give it more of a chance.
I am going to put your work on my to read list, specifically for this wonderous response. You have an outstanding ability to turn a phrase.
July 23, 2015 — 3:20 AM
tambra nicole says:
I agree with Paigevest, this post is made of awesome!
July 23, 2015 — 3:23 AM
Terry Jackman says:
Thank you Thank you Thank you.
As a female writer who’s just had a book about far future ‘gay’ characters I’m obviously not fit to shine such a sad puppy’s shoes either. It’s SO nice to see someone who can answer back so effectively to a large audience.
July 23, 2015 — 3:46 AM
Silent_Dan says:
And yet writers are probably always wondering “is my book gay enough to pass the gay test?” :p
July 23, 2015 — 4:23 AM
Jemima Pett says:
I love your posts, Chuck. It helps me prepare for the invective when my heterosexual vegetarian male asteroid miner gets involved with a meat-eating alien and a bigoted white dude, who in turn get involved with a heterosexual woman who turns them all down in favour of the sensitive, caring male (who of course is gay). 😉
July 23, 2015 — 5:43 AM
Holly says:
I can top that story! Although your eloquent response is better (a thousand times better) then anything I could think up. I write Slash fanfiction and a reviewer inquired whether I planned to have my male Commander Shepard (Mass Effect video game series) continue to “Top” Garrus (an alien, a turian male to be exact) I responded, you know in a healthy intimate relationship that kind of thing really doesn’t exist. Those roles and others are shared, reversed and enjoyed. I know, I went the adult route with my response and this is what he said, Well, he just wanted to know because if I didn’t plan to have Shepard the Top and Dom, then he wouldn’t be able to keep reading my story. He continued that when an alien and a human have sex, the human should always be dominant. When I started breathing again, I realized I had to give the young man props for including, racism, sexism and xenophobia in one sentence. My response shall have Commander Shepard handcuffed to the ship’s cannon with Garrus bringing up the rear if you get my point. ;-D
July 23, 2015 — 7:45 AM
Holly says:
@ David Mack
Your snarky reader obviously doesn’t know about the 40+ years of Kirk/Spock Slash fiction. IDIC, indeed. Live long and prosper.
July 23, 2015 — 8:10 AM
Mad says:
Dear Penmonkey, as a parent of teenagers who are (strangely) not beardo sourpuss white dudes (or straight, either), I am always on the lookout for MOAR GAY in the YA genre, so that they can more easily find themselves reflected in the pages. Thank you for this highly entertaining rant making yours so easy to flag as fitting that criteria. And thank you, slightly less literate complaint dude, for inspiring this post. I always appreciate such dutiful efforts to Spread the Gay.
July 23, 2015 — 8:16 AM
mariceljimenez says:
The Wendig has ranted! I haven’t read book 3 yet, but indeed the story was getting there rather clearly after book 2 and there were plenty of other homosexual moments on that one. Did he not notice the people on the flotillas had polygamous homo-hetero-sexual-relationships? Anyway, as usual you tell it like it is Chuck. Don’t really understand why people get so upset over fictional characters anyway. And I love the comment by Voxael… What do these readers expect from their complaining letters? That you change the book? Ridiculous!
July 23, 2015 — 8:39 AM
thehorrorinmyheart says:
lol. I think your reader just got book whipped 🙂
July 23, 2015 — 8:42 AM
furyious says:
Thanks Chuck. As usual your words are filled with razor-like Cuddly wisdom that cushions yet prickles! Hrm…kind of like a beard. Anyway, you hit the nail up on the head, per usual. Thank you, and oh yeah….the pug pic… SMOKIN!
July 23, 2015 — 8:56 AM
K.L. Royal says:
Mic. Drop. Pen. Drop. Taco. Drop. Whichever is appropriate. But, try not to waste the taco.
July 23, 2015 — 9:09 AM
Giana says:
I actually laughed out loud when I opened the link of the cuddly pug xD Thanks Chuck, awesome as always.
July 23, 2015 — 9:11 AM
buffalowmn says:
So…can we just go ahead and make “cuddly pug” an Official Slang Term(TM)? Is there, like, a process for that?
July 23, 2015 — 9:29 AM
Kira Morgana says:
I do love your idea of a Cuddly Pug Pic… and I completely agree with your summation of Pouty McGee (would that be a NCIS reference) and his… difficulty in accepting your wonderful characters.
You are, sir, utterly inspiring.
July 23, 2015 — 9:37 AM
Clementine Danger says:
This reminds me of a guy who reviewed Settlers 7: Paths to a Kingdom (a video game) as being a very fun game, very nice, five stars, but would it be possible to play the story campaign as a male character? It made him uncomfortable to be called “princess” and “my lady” all the time, so the developers should address that.
It’s okay though. I told him to not be scared, that I’d been playing male characters my entire life, and it is entirely survivable.
By which I mean, there seems to be this moment every person’s life where they are forced to realize not everything can be all about them always, and other people get to have a turn in the spotlight too. For most people, this moment comes at the age of about, oh, let’s say four. So it’s really, really weird and pathetic to see that moment happening to a grown-ass adult.
“This thing is not about people exactly like me? But… But what do I- I mean I’m… OMG Y U H8 ME!!?!??” *flounce*
July 23, 2015 — 9:39 AM
Damian Trasler says:
Amazed here by two things: This guy’s outrage and the fact that YOUR KID IS FOUR NOW? Where the hell did the time go? I should definitely leave the internet for a bit, and go get dressed. Four years? Jeez…..
July 23, 2015 — 10:07 AM
James Heiney says:
Love that you sent that considerate pic of the cuddly pug. Other than that, boffo, as always.
July 23, 2015 — 10:08 AM
Tala Gordon says:
I just stumbled upon this post from a friend f mine from facebook. I will tell you right now I will be reading your books and I will be sharing this. I think you are an amazing person, just by the writing of this. Kudos to you! We live in a world that needs less hate, and more love!
July 23, 2015 — 10:34 AM
todddillard says:
I wish I could find the link, but you recently posted something that lead to an article where an author mentioned that writing just about you/people like you is, in of itself, monocultural fantasy. There are so many people in the world, so many different and wonderful people, and each of them deserves not only to be represented in novels and other media, but to also be the heroes/protagonists of those novels/that media. It’s such a sad thing that there are people who want to inhibit their imaginations by only reading about someone like themselves. A world without diversity is a world without dimensions, you known?
July 23, 2015 — 10:55 AM
Michael Slavitch (@kerfluffer) says:
I’ve seen gay male bandwagons at Pride. You’re right, they look like they’re having fun.
In fact, apart from Shriners, the only bandwagons I’ve ever seen have been gay ones. And I’m not sure about the Shriners.
July 23, 2015 — 10:58 AM
Dawn Napier says:
You magnificent bastard.
July 23, 2015 — 11:56 AM
Elizabeth Mallory says:
This is so awesome and says so many true things, I can’t even.
Thanks, Chuck.
July 23, 2015 — 11:59 AM
Kerry Benton says:
Well said, and total agreement. Pretty amazing that they made it all they way thru to the last book before the email… I guess there was enough corn and violence to keep ’em going in spite of the gay parts?
And as to “One reviewer once said that teenagers, carte blanche, don’t say bad words.”
I used to think that the whole “adults are out of touch” thing was overblown… even as a kid I was like, yeah, some parents don’t Get It, but mostly I feel like they basically know what’s going on. And then I see people like that one every so often and it’s like, did that person just arrive from another planet? If so, did that other planet somehow have space travel but not the ability to observe things? Or, like, memory? I… I can’t even imagine the level of self-selected isolation that would permit an adult human to believe that teenagers—TEENAGERS—don’t curse(/drink/have sex/etc./etc.).
July 23, 2015 — 12:28 PM
kirizar says:
Very nice cuddly pigs. Very nice indeed.
July 23, 2015 — 12:35 PM
dawnsister says:
First: I love your cuddly pugs. I need more of these cuddly pugs in my life.
Second: Wow, just wow. It’s like he thinks you wrote the story personally for him. You didn’t write the story for anyone but you did share it, and he should feel lucky that you did. A lot of writers don’t get that far. He is also assuming that the only people that would read your stories are people like him. That is almost as insular as the person who thought that teenagers don’t say bad words. It’s almost the same as saying the Queen doesn’t go to the toilet, or not being able to even think about your parents having sex.
Does he think he can dictate what you include in your stories? Fool. I hope he clicked on the cuddly pugs picture.
July 23, 2015 — 1:24 PM
Old-ish white dude from texas says:
As a grown adult man-boy who shits a brick every other time I read your posts or work, fuckin’a right! Dude’s been gay for a hot minute and in no way is it central to the story.
I’m trying to get my daughter to read this series, but she’s currently hung up on love stories about cancer patients and/or fallen angels. Maybe I can turn her in to Atlanta Burns…
July 23, 2015 — 1:36 PM
Michael Slavitch (@kerfluffer) says:
Oh one thing that I forgot to mention: It’s YA! YAY!! I’ve got teenaged kids who have friends that are painfully cluelessly clumsily coming out (as apart from straight kids painfully cluelessly clumsily being straight) and goddamn it they NEED TO READ SHIT THAT’S ABOUT THEM AND IS GOOD OH SO YES GOOD. We as a society are just starting to do that at proper scale. Keep it up, thanks, and more cuddle pigs.
I’m a middle aged straight dad what the fuck do I know OH LOOK HERE’S A BOOK THAT DOESN’T IGNORE YOU COMPLETELY AND YOU KNOW GOOD STUFF HERE READ I DON’T GET IT BUT I LOVE YOU thanks can I watch Sportscenter?
July 23, 2015 — 2:30 PM
Tony says:
Dontcha know? It’s much better to stay on the all heterosexual bandwagon and continue the heterosexual bias that pervades…everything.
July 23, 2015 — 3:06 PM
Tony says:
As a gay man, I *loved* this post. I’m a huge fan of snark. And well-placed, well-aimed snark that punches up? Even better.
And adding to that are the comments. It’s really heartening to see so many people so supportive of inclusivity of gay people.
July 23, 2015 — 3:16 PM
Victorria says:
:: Off to an internet retailer to buy these books. ::
July 23, 2015 — 3:17 PM
Brandy Ackerley says:
I don’t usually read your posts, and yet every time I see one directed my way by people I respect on FB, I have to give the slow clap of appreciation. Also, these books sound pretty interesting. I may have to pick up the first one and see how it is.
July 23, 2015 — 3:22 PM