We support a ceasefire in Palestine.
Jean Marie Ward says:
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Before I get to the meat of this blog, I’d like to express my gratitude to Laurie and Deb for giving me the opportunity to post on Body Impolitic. It’s a privilege and an honor to be featured among so much important art and social commentary. Thank you so much.
It’s a truism that readers often deduce more about an author’s hopes, fears, and obsessions from reading their work than the author ever imagines, much less applies to themself. For me, that’s certainly been the case. I’ve been surprised, even shocked, by reader insights into issues I thought were cunningly slipped in subtext or which I never considered at all. But that changes when you assemble a collection of your work. Reading so much of yourself at once forces you to examine your writing a lot more closely.
I’m an entertainer. I write stories to make people laugh and gasp in surprise. I don’t craft my plots around a message. I just follow where the characters lead. They’re a pretty empty-headed lot. They seldom look beyond what they want or need. I just wind them up and let them loose in situations I’d personally find thrilling, amusing, or resonant.
I let a shapeshifting Asian dragon loose in a government conference in 1420s Nanjing, because I was trapped in so many stultifying professional events, I longed for mayhem to explode in the middle of the banquet chairs. I wrote about a cat who imprinted on The X-Files to upend perceptions of genre tropes and because it was ridiculous. I like ridiculous. I’m the one who wrote about a refrigerator time machine, after all. But I also wrote about a young woman in Kublai Khan’s Mongolia who became dragon bait as the result of a crooked lottery. I wanted her to do more than survive. I wanted her to triumph.
All these plots and characters relate to something in my life–my years working for the government, my amusement at people taking their mysteries or science fiction a little too seriously, my recollections of myself and others at the mercy of authority figures who have only their own interests at heart.
But looking at the short stories in my first collection, Dragons, Cats, and Formidable Femmes, as a unit, I think there’s something more going on. Nothing heavy-handed, I hope. But there, nonetheless.
Award-winning North Carolina writer Michael G. Williams once told me in an interview that every word a writer puts in pixels or on paper helps create the world in which they want to live. Reading over my own work, even the never-before-published pieces and the old fictions in dire need of proper editing, I hope that’s true. My chosen world is a place where people grow, laugh, and have adventures. Where people of all cultures and conditions are worthy of respect—and get it before their story’s final line. Where there is hope in the direst of circumstances and individuals work together to create a better future for themselves and others.
At least, that’s what I see there. I hope my readers see it too.
Dragons, Cats, and Formidable Femmes
Ginger Blue Publishing, July 15, 2024
Buy links: Amazon, Barnes & Noble , Kobo, and Apple Books.
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Debbie occasionally posts on Mastodon.
Follow Laurie’s Pandemic Shadows photos on Instagram.
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