A Tour of the Multiverse: The Worldbuilding of Palingenesis

Introduction

Welcome back. This week I’ll be tackling the elements that went into the world building of Palingenesis.

As kid I was a loner, and the library was my refuge; In seventh grade I got big into mythology, starting with the Greek myths, then moved on to Norse and Egyptian mythology.

During this time I was also big into video games, anime, comics, and sci-fi/fantasy shows like Buffy, Charmed, and  Star Trek: The Next Generation. All of this shaped the worldbuilding of Palingenesis, as I will explain.

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The Strength That Endures: Symbols in Palingenesis

Introduction

Welcome back.

 In this post I’ll be exploring symbols and their use within the world of Palingenesis. But what is a symbol?

The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines a symbol as: something that stands for or suggests something else by reason of relationship, association, convention, or accidental resemblance, especially :  a visible sign of something invisible. Familiar examples of such symbols are the cross, Star of David, and the star and crescent.

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Review Reverie

Reverie, by Ryan La Sala (note: I follow him on Twitter), is a YA fantasy that focuses Kane Montgomery, a gay high schooler who has three big problems. He stole his father’s classic car and crashed it into a local landmark, is the primary suspect in the disappearance of local artist Maxine Ozman, and he can’t remember anything about himself prior to the crash.

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Review Yes No Maybe So

Yes No Maybe So is a YA romance by Aisha Saeed and Becky Albertalli that follows seventeen-year-olds Jamie Goldberg and Maya Rehman as they are forced by their parents to canvass for Jordan Rossum, the Georgia state Democratic candidate for their district’s special election.

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Review: Team Phison Forever

Team Phison Forever, by Chace Verity, is the sequel to Team Phison and picks up a year-and-a-half after the end of the first novella. This time Tyson is the point of view character and is dealing with self-worth and abandonment issues as he prepares to propose to Phil.

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Review: Team Phison

Team Phison by Chace Verity is a geeky May December mm romance novella. Fifty-something Phil Hutton is devastated when Curtis, his partner of several years, leaves him for a younger man. To cope with this Phil begins playing Defend Earth at all Cost, a Halo-esque first-person shooter PC game. While playing campaign mode, Phil is paired with BisonFalls; he’s a complete noob and Phil has to show him how to do everything.

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Burn After Reading: Palingenesis, Transmigration of Souls, and Jung’s Collective Unconscious

Introduction

Welcome,

This is the first in a series of posts leading up to the cover reveal of Palingenesis, my debut YA novel about 12-year-old Travis Turner, a bullied biracial geeky boy who learns he’s evil’s chosen. Travis must then fight the devil to protect the boy and world he loves.

Palingenesis is the first in a series and will release September 1, 2021. A recurring motif in the story is that of rebirth as symbolized by the phoenix, but this growth doesn’t come easy. As Octavia Butler said:

In order to rise from its own ashes, a Phoenix first must burn.

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Strange Fruit: on the Commodification of Black and LGBTQ+ Trauma

Introduction

From the recent videos of police brutalizing and murdering Black people and those depicting violence against LGBTQ+ folks, to Books like The Hate U Give and Red, White & Royal Blue, trauma porn has been in for a while now. Trauma porn is defined as any media where the primary focus is on the suffering or pain of its characters.

Now you might be thinking, “Doesn’t everyone face challenges?” And you’d be right. The issues comes when the people in these stories primarily come from marginalized communities. Take videos of rundown buildings in Detroit and other majority minority cities for example. The purpose of said videos weren’t to humanize the residents of these cities but to provide entertainment for the bourgeoise whites and others who watched them. Likewise, when these same people read about Black and LGBTQ+ pain, they consume them as entertainment, which resultes in the dehumanizing of both communities.

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Review: The Space between Worlds

 

The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson is a sci-fi mystery that centers around traversers, people who can travel to parallel dimensions, but only if their counterparts on theses worlds (dops) are dead. Caramenta is such a traverser, and on her first trip she dies, and her dop, Caralee, assumes her identity for the next six years, where the story picks up.

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Whites Only Need Apply: On the Chosen One trope, White Entitlement, and White Male Mediocrity

Introduction

As I wrote in Fantastical Racism, the chosen one trope is a staple of the Fantasy genre, which more often than not puts allo, cis , het, white males in the position of the chosen one. Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, John Snow, they are all mediocre white males who are proven to be the chosen ones of their respected books. In each case there are infinitely more interesting characters supporting them, yet because they are the designated self-insert for readers, we have to follow their journeys.

 But more than that, this has led to generations of white males feeling entitled to the world, because they’ve grown up saturated in media that’s told them they are special, when they are mediocre at best.  

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But Not Too Black

Introduction

As I wrote in YA So White there is a lack of Black characters in YA; specifically, Black characters are often rendered as sidekicks to the white protagonists, only there to give them support and advance their arc. Or they are whitewashed, stripped of all their flavor to please the bland palates of white readers.

 And in the worst cases they are reduced to passive objects for the white characters to swoon over, as documented by Aisha Monet in her medium.com article Queer Love Interests of Color and the White Gaze. Be it Blue from Simon v. The Homo Sapiens Agenda, Abbey from Leah Out Loud, Dre from The State of Us, or even Starr from The Hate U Give, Black bodies are reduced to mates for white characters.

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Review: Felix Ever After

Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender is a queer romance mystery that centers on seventeen-year-old Felix Love, who’s about to graduate from his private high school but has never been kissed, much less in love. Felix is a trans male of color and his father has a hard time accepting him, so he spends most of his time at his best friend Ezra’s apartment. Ezra’s parents are super rich and bought him his own apartment so he could attend their school’s summer art program.

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YA So White: Decentering Whiteness in Young Adult Literature

A Great Big White World

Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, Katniss Everdeen, Tris Prior, Clary Fray, Hazel Grace Lancaster. What do these all have in common? They are all characters from popular YA Novels. But they are also all white, and this is problematic because Black, brown, indigenous, and other kids of color need to see themselves reflected in the books they read.  

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To Boldly Go: On the Lack of Diversity in Science Fiction

Introduction

Science Fiction (sci-fi) is a fascinating genre with an endless possibility of worlds to explore. However, you won’t often find many brown or Black people like me in them, or anyone who isn’t an allo, cis, het, white male. And this is a shame since blerds (Black/brown nerds) are starving to see themselves as space captains, genetically engineered super soldiers, or mutant superheroes.

At its heart, sci-fi is about exploring the human condition through the wonders of science and technology, so why then are people of color often omitted from these stories?   As with most things, history provides an insight.

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Fantastic Racism: On the Lack of Diversity in the Fantasy Genre

girl reading a book with doves flying around her

Introduction

Orcs and elves, vampires and werewolves, angels and demons—you’ll find these creatures and more in Fantasy novels. But what you’ll seldom find are people like me: Black and brown folks. But why is this? It’s not as though people like me don’t read and write in this genre; you have fantasy greats such as Octavia E. Butler, N.K. Jemisin, and Charles R. Saunders. And in recent years there has been a push for more diverse books in every genre, so why the hold up with Fantasy? This post aims to answer this question.

First, we must examine the history of Fantasy.

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