![]() ![]() ![]() The queer MG field is small, very small, and in that sense I would say everyone has to read them. ![]() Interestingly, we all play with the theme of being on stage as a way to try on identities and to reveal who we are. There’s Gracefully Grayson by Ami Polonsky, which is the only other trans MG novel I’m aware of from a mainstream publisher, and 5-6-7-Nate! and its sequel by Tim Federle. I have to think carefully about when I’m representing a member of a group I’m part of and when I’m allying with those I care about.īecause no interview is complete without some book recommendations: are there any other middle grade novels with LGBTQ+ themes that you think everyone needs to read? I was just focused on telling the story I needed to see in the world, until I looked up and saw the distant wave coming closer, and I knew it was time to finish it up, take the plunge, and send it out into the world.Īs I’m working on my new project, which is more intersectional (involving issues of deafness, the Black Lives Matter movement, intergenerational strife and first crushes), I’m running into a new terrain of balancing the varying threads of the piece. ![]() I was never intending George to be marketable. Did you ever experience this? If so, how did you combat it? I often hear marginalized authors talk about the tendency to self-censor – to erase the diverse elements in a story in advance out of fear that keeping them would tank the book’s marketability. ![]()
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