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I'd never heard of Jessica Verday before yesterday, but I definitely plan to follow her now. This is such an awesome response to such a nasty situation.
I have to confess, I feel weird about Trisha Telep being involved. She was my agent until last year. We didn't part badly, but we haven't had any contact since then, and I can hardly say I "know" her. But her response to this still surprised and saddened me. The more time I've had to reflect on things, the more I've come to realise we weren't a good fit agent/writer-wise, and I'm grateful now that we parted ways when we did. I'm even more grateful now, because I don't think I could have happily remained her client under the circumstances. I'd hate to see this become a witch hunt, because the internet is pretty unforgiving, and threatening anyone with death (as has already happened) is never an eloquent solution to a problem.
On the other hand, Jessica Verday is in the right. Whatever else you may make of the situation, that's undeniable. And I'm buying one of her books on payday, because anyone with that much integrity is worth reading, as far as I'm concerned.
I have to confess, I feel weird about Trisha Telep being involved. She was my agent until last year. We didn't part badly, but we haven't had any contact since then, and I can hardly say I "know" her. But her response to this still surprised and saddened me. The more time I've had to reflect on things, the more I've come to realise we weren't a good fit agent/writer-wise, and I'm grateful now that we parted ways when we did. I'm even more grateful now, because I don't think I could have happily remained her client under the circumstances. I'd hate to see this become a witch hunt, because the internet is pretty unforgiving, and threatening anyone with death (as has already happened) is never an eloquent solution to a problem.
On the other hand, Jessica Verday is in the right. Whatever else you may make of the situation, that's undeniable. And I'm buying one of her books on payday, because anyone with that much integrity is worth reading, as far as I'm concerned.
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on 2011-03-23 01:54 pm (UTC)Oh, and as for mardelwanda's comment about the "art community" - that's irrelevant. The anthology is compiled for a specific market, and that market is NOT the "art community".
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on 2011-03-23 02:28 pm (UTC)What I get from it all is that, for whatever reason, Trisha didn't approve of the gay romance angle. I'm not calling her a homophobe. But she made a judgement call on behalf of the publisher that she shouldn't have. I think it's important that issues like this get flagged, not so we can all decide Trisha is evil and Verday is a saint, but because when you sweep issues about anything like this - sexuality, race, gender, whatever - under the rug, it sends out the message that a certain way of life is "wrong" and another isn't, and that's not a message I can support.
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on 2011-03-23 10:28 pm (UTC)I didn't watch Brokeback Mountain. I had no desire to. I don't like cowboy films, and I'm not much for romance. The fact that it's "gay" didn't put me off because I was never "on". But apparently, according to some people, that makes me homophobic. And so they feel it's within their rights, nay it's there bounden duty, to lecture me on it.
I got the feel that there's at least some of that going on here too. I didn't see the comment that made it clear this was a story with a "clearly romantic" relationship, but if it was then I can sympathise even more with Telep's concern over whether it would suit a publisher aiming at certain markets. Sure the way she handled it (especially if it really was a "re-write it as straight", not just a "this wouldn't be a problem if it were straight, but I'm a little concerned" that Verday chose to interpret a certain way) sucked. But the tone of that discussion, and to a lesser extent the tone here, looks like gay-rights preaching about how fundamentally evil most straight people are. Your comment about sweeping issues under the carpet was, I'm sure, referring to inappropriate editorial decisions, which are merely so unimportant as to make the comment laughable. But the alternative is that you're suggesting that NOT publishing a gay story in any given anthology is inherently an evil form of discrimination. See how daft that is?
It's a subject a lot of people get wildly irrational about. And the specific details of this incident are not entirely clear, because we've only been given interpretations. I was merely calling for a bit of balance and, dare I say it, acceptance.
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on 2011-03-23 11:35 pm (UTC)I'm not suggesting that not publishing a gay story is a crime or evil. I'm a bit puzzled as to where that came from. What I am saying is that excluding a story for having gay content is offensive to me, the same way that changing the cover of a book featuring an African-American narrator to show a white person is offensive. Of course people.don't have to read a story with gay content if it doesn't appeal to them, the same way I don't have to read space opera or military history. But I think it would be nice if the choice were there, rather than being made for me by an editor, whatever her intention was.
For what it's worth, I don't think Trisha is homophobic for a second. I think she made a poor judgement call and compounded the problem with a flippant apology. I'm sure she doesn't need me to defend her though.