Superman is the Costume: What Tarantino Got Wrong In his Superman Speech

image by Rudy Ao via scop.io

Introduction

Welcome readers!

Today’s post will cover Bill’s superman monologue from Kill Bill Vol. 2, and what Tarantino got wrong about Superman and Batman.

For those who’ve never seen the movie or its prequel, briefly the series follows Beatrix Kiddo aka The Bride, aka Black Mamba, one of the eponymous Bill’s female assassins, who finding herself pregnant with Bill’s child, changes her identity and goes in hiding.

That is until Bill finds and executes her and everyone at her wedding rehearsal.

Beatrix survives being shot in the head and falling into a years-long coma, then goes on a “rip roaring rampage of revenge” on Bill and the other female assassins.

Bill’s Superman Speech

Towards the end of vol. 2 Beatrix finds Bill, and he shoots her with a potent truth serum and asks her why she left him and gives his Superman monologue, which I’ll now quote here, formatted for better readability:

“As you may know, I’m quite keen on comic books. Especially ones about superheroes. I find the whole mythology surrounding superheroes fascinating. Take my favorite superhero, Superman. Not a great comic book, not particularly well-drawn, but the mythology. The mythology is not only great, it’s unique…

“Now a staple of the superhero mythology is, there’s the superhero and there’s the alter ego. Batman is actually Bruce Wayne, Spider-Man is actually Peter Parker. When the character wakes up in the morning, he’s Peter Parker. He has to put on a costume to become Spider-Man. And it is in that characteristics Superman stands alone.

“Superman didn’t become Superman. Superman was born Superman. When Superman wakes up in the morning, he’s Superman.

“His alter ego is Clark Kent. His outfit with the big red “S”, that’s the blanket he was wrapped in when the Kents found him.

“Those are his clothes.

“What Kent wears—the glasses, the business suit—that’s the costume. That’s the costume Superman wears to blend in with us. Clark Kent is how Superman views us.

“And what are the characteristics of Clark Kent? He’s weak, he’s unsure of himself, he’s a coward. Clark Kent is Superman’s critique on the whole human race.”

The problem with Bill’s monologue is it fundamentally gets both Superman and Batman wrong, which I’ll now show in the following paragraphs, beginning with Superman.

The Four Faces of Superman

 As Much as I love the Superman monologue, it’s not just wrong, but incomplete. Superman has three alter egos and one core personality that informs those personas. I’ll discuss each in turn.

Smallville

First, there is Superman’s core identity, the simple farm boy from Smallville; he is the earnest, loyal, fair, and kind boy the Kents raised him to be. He is the boy scout, as Batman calls him, who does what is right without regard for harm to himself and what others may think of his actions.

In fights with Darkside and Doomsday we see Superman endure horrific trauma to protect the earth, precisely because of the values the Kents instilled with him in Smallville.  And where he raised anywhere else by anyone else, he wouldn’t be the same person.

 This is evidenced by Superman: Red Son, the what if comic miniseries in which his spaceship landed in the Ukraine, and he became a tool of the Soviet Union. And in a parallel universe where he lands in Sudetenland instead of Kansas, he becomes a tool of the Third Reich, allowing Hitler to conquer the world.

Moreover, in every storyline where he hangs up the cape, he always goes back to Smallville to help the Kents and live a quiet life.

And it’s because of the Kents he became Superman.

Superman

Superman is the distillation of everything good the Kents taught him as a child. He is humble, brave, kind, and selfless. While his costume may be his clothes, the man inside them is 100% human.

 For Superman is Clark’s critique on humanity.

 He could have used his powers for selfish reasons and become the greatest supervillain ever as he does in another what if comic where a villain kills Lois Lane, and he becomes an authoritarian despot. But he doesn’t because that’s not who he is at his core.

He may have been born a Kryptonian, but the Kents raised him to be human. Which leads me to my next point.

Kal-El

Kal-El, Superman’s Kryptonian name, is also his second persona.

Never knowing his bio parents exact from the recordings, Superman only acts as Kal-El when he’s at the Fortress of Solitude, doing experiments and reviewing the recordings Jor-El and Lara-El left him. Kal-El represents the part of Superman that longs for a life that might have been if Krypton had not exploded. It is his attempt to reconcile himself as a stranger in a strange land and the last of his kind.

As mentioned above, even the name of his headquarters evokes a melancholy.

But though he may be a lone Krypton among billion of humans, he is not alone.

Metropolis

 Superman’s final persona is that of Metropolis, the bumbling, milquetoast coward who works as a reporter at The Daily Planet. Like Superman is the costume he wears to be the best version of his Smallville persona, Metropolis is the costume he wears to be Superman, as Tarantino said.

However, it isn’t a comment on humanity in the way he thinks. Metropolis is the way Superman understands how humanity views weakness, while Superman is how he understands humanity to view power.

And it’s this dichotomy of power versus weakness that is informed by his core personality, Smallville.

Superman and the Ubermensch

Superman is all the best things about humanity condensed into one being. Where he to have been born on Earth, he would have been a but another simple man from middle America, but because of his powers and upbringing, Superman is the apotheosis of what humanity should strive for: humanity devoid of its weaknesses, physical and psychological.

He is hope: The Ubermensch.

It’s no surprise Superman has many messianic qualities, as two Jewish teenagers, Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, in 1934, created him. The “S” he wears means hope, and Bryan Singer explored this connection between Superman and the Messhiah extensively in Superman: Man of Steel, in which we see a young Clark Kent struggle to control his powers but come out the other side the hero we know so well.

Superman than is a projection of the human psyche, representing not who we are but who we could be if we were to evolve past our baser instincts and prejudices. Thus, he is a critique not of humanity’s shortcomings, but its aspirations and potential.

As Clark goes from his metropolis persona to his superman person, so too can humanity transform into something greater than itself it listens its better angels.

Now that I’ve made my case for how Tarantino got Superman wrong, I’ll move on to how he also got batman wrong.

The Man Behind the Mask

For those unaware, Batman’s origin is he witnessed criminals gun down his parents outside a movie theater when he was a child, and this trauma drove him to travel the world, learning marital arts and how to solve crimes, as famously depicted in Christer Nolan’s Batman Begins.

 During Bill’s monologue, he says Bruce Wayne must put on a costume to become Batman, but this is false for two reasons.

First, there are two Bruce Waynes, the playboy billionaire (Bruce 2) and the psychologically damaged boy (Bruce Prime). The latter died the night his parents died, and his mind created Batman as a defense mechanism.

He may have not known who it was or what to call this new persona yet, but the child that was Bruce Wayne ceased to exist, and in his place was an angry, wounded animal poised to lash out at the world. To aide him, he created Bruce 2.

And it’s this second Bruce Wayne that is a costume, so that he can be himself: Batman.

Second, with or without the cape and cowl, he is Batman 24/7. Even when wearing the mask of Bruce 2, he still thinks, acts, and conducts himself like Batman, because that’s who he is at his core.

Moreover, even in timelines where he gives up the hood, he still acts as Batman by training the next generation of caped crusaders, because that’s who he is. To do otherwise would mean confronting the childhood trauma that spawned the birth of Batman. But as brave as Batman is, that would be a bridge too far for him to cross. Whatever persona he inhibits, he’s still a deeply damaged person with tons of issues.

Consequently, that’s one reason I prefer him over Superman.

Conclusion

Image by Aliekber Ozturk via scop.io

Let me close by saying I’m not hating on either Tarantino or Superman. I’ve enjoyed the former’s movies for years and will continue to watch them, so no: I’m not a hater. Second, while I prefer Batman to Superman, I’m not blind to the appeal of Superman. As I said above, he is the best of humanity and we should all try to be more like him, now more than ever.

As a new tide of fascism and war rises, remember that inside us all is the ember of a hero waiting to rise from the ashes of our fears. If only we have the courage to stand against the darkness and shine. 

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Review: Monster Hunter International

Monster Hunter International by Larry Correia

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


Interesting premise, poor execution.

Monster Hunter International is the first book in the Larry Correia’s urban fantasy series about gun-loving monster hunters. It follows Owen “Z” Pitts, who is recruited by Monster Hunters International after killing his werewolf boss with his bare hands.

Owen then undergoes training and soon finds himself in the middle of the ancient battle between good and evil, as he and his fellow Hunters try to stop the Cursed One from using an evil relic to “destroy time”.

At nearly 500 pages, Correia could have rightly cut this book in half, and you wouldn’t miss a thing as he dedicates most of the plot to pointless descriptions of the various weapons and ammo, when he isn’t info dumping things repeatedly.

To make matters worse, the scenes drag on well beyond where they should end and become so redundant that by the end of the book, every scene feels the same. And you’re forced to slog through 20-plus-page chapters full of wall-of-text paragraphs.

And if that weren’t bad enough, all the characters have the personality and depth of cardboard. But the worst offender is Owen who, despite being “big, ugly, and ordinary” is revealed to be a master fighter, gunsmith, marksmen, and a master at any weapon he picks up, and at one point he’s asked to teach a class because he’s so good with guns. And did I mention he ends up with the hottest woman ever, who he falls in with at first sight?
Just no.

I could forgive all that had this book been interesting, but it was predictable to a fault that by the end I was skipping paragraphs to finish it.

Honestly, the only reason I didn’t give this one star is because the premise seemed interesting, but it quickly became apparent that Correia was more interested in waxing poetic about guns and pushing his political views than telling a good story.

This book reads like something a 12-year-old boy obsessed with guns, horror movies, and sex would write and is very amateurish, even by debut novel and self-published book standards.

Also, don’t read this book if you’re Black or brown, as Owen and his love interest Julie have an infuriating conversation about “how not racist” they are. This leads to Julie saying how the South isn’t racist anymore, how the Confederates weren’t really racist, and how the real racists are the Yankee Liberals and politicians in DC.

Did I mention this conversation takes place at Julie’s ancestral home, a former plantation, complete with slave quarters? Just no.

To summarize, this book started out okay, but took a nosedive fast and got worse.

I have no desire to read any other books in this series and don’t recommend you read it unless you have a strong liver and want to take a shot every time someone mentions guns/weapons/ammo.

I give Monster Hunters International 2.0 out of 5.0 stars.



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Review: Cute Mutants Vol. 4

Cute Mutants Vol 4: The Sisterhood of Evil Mutants by S.J. Whitby

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


The Sisterhood of Evil Mutants by SJ Whitby is the fourth entry in The Cute Mutants Series and is decidedly darker than the previous books. Volume four finds Dylan and company in West Haven, a clandestine refuge for mutants.

And while Whitby introduces several new characters, they reduce most of them to either cannon fodder or bit players, which was a shame.

I also didn’t like Whitby’s choice to split the Cute Mutants into two groups later in the book, as it robbed the story of the camaraderie and group dynamics that made the previous books so fun to read.

Dylan, Dani, Emma, Alyse, and newcomer Feral (a hybrid of Wolverine and Beast from the X-Men) form the first group and begin robbing banks connected to DainTree, the in-universe version of Google/Amazon. They then donate that money to various charitable causes to improve the PR of Mutant kind, after a group of Mutants claiming to be affiliated with Dylan and the Cute Mutants carry out a terrorist attack on Washington DC.

The second team; that stays behind in West Haven; comprises Lou, Maddison, Gladdy, and Katie.

This could have worked if there were chapters following the second group. Instead, readers only follow Dylan’s group, leaving you wondering about the safety of those back in West Haven.

I enjoyed the political intrigue within West Haven and wished we saw more of Dylan and Dani locking head with Mystic and Far Sight, members of the council that decide what issues to bring up for votes, before the group split.

Dylan’s interaction with memory-erasing therapist Ray, were also nice to read as while they talked about Dylan’s trauma and other issues, Ray also gave them cryptic clues to the dangers hiding in West Haven and the machinations of the council.

It was also nice that we finally learned the mystery behind Emma, her powers, and her parents you in this book. Though, I predicted the plot twist near the end and thought the ending edged into Deus ex machina territory with how several characters’ deaths were reversed, like it was nothing.

Overall, while I did like this book, it wasn’t as fun as the previous ones and it has become clear to me anyone who isn’t Dylan or in their immediate friend circle doesn’t matter, which is sad as it was the OG team that initially drew me into the series.

I will read the next in the series, but I’ll lower my expectations re: other characters getting their time to shine.
I give Cute Mutants Vol. 4 4.0 out of 5.0 stars.




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Review: Sanctum: A Last Vampire Huntress Novel

Sanctum: A Last Vampire Huntress Novel by Delizhia Jenkins

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


Sanctum by Delizhia Jenkins Follows Kenya, the last of a line of vampire hunters, as she attempts to destroy Adam, the original vampire.

While I liked the premise of this story, it sorely needed more editing. My first issue was the copious amounts of flashbacks, so much so, Delizhia spent little time on the plot in the current storyline.

Second, was the lack of a distinctive voice, which wouldn’t have been such an issue if the story hadn’t used alternating first-person POV.

To make matters worse, Delizhia constantly switched between present tense and past tense, often in the same sentence. And her sentences were full of redundancy, and she had the crutch of over relying on adverbs to prop up her weak sentences.

I also felt Kenya, Trenton, and the other characters lacked any depth and because of this and the issues I mentioned above, I didn’t care about them.

While the second half of the book wasn’t as riddled with these issues, it still wasn’t that enjoyable. I often skimmed or skipped passages to just get to the end, which was so predictable.

Overall, I felt like I was reading a first or second draft, then a finished novel, and can only recommend this book if you rent it from your library or read on Kindle Unlimited for free.

Otherwise, skip it.

I give Sanctum: A Last Vampire Huntress Novel 2.0 out of 5.0 stars.





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Review: Draw the Line

Draw the Line by Laurent Linn



My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Draw the Line by Laurent Linn is a gay YA coming-of-age set in small -town Texas and follows closeted sixteen-year-old Adrian Piper as he learns to stand up for himself and others against the homophobic bullies and administrators at his high school.

Initially, I hated Adrian and this book and dnf’d it years ago, but lately I’ve been on a queer super hero kick and revisited it now that I’m a little older.

In hindsight, I realize my visceral hate was due to Adrian reminding me too much of myself, e.g. his internalized homophobia and femephobia and being a shy geeky kid with a superhero alter ego.

Graphite, the main character of Adrian’s comic, was interesting, and I loved how the comics broke up/introduced the chapters. The artwork was also good and reminiscent of Webtoon comics I’ve read.

Overall, I liked the plot of the story, but I had some issues.

First, Adrian’s friend Audrey, was the sole Black main character and often described as loud, bossy, and angry. She also had no role outside of helping Adrian and advancing his storyline.

Second, while I found Adrian’s relationship with Lev cute and wholesome, it came off as forced and rushed as they go from complete strangers to boyfriends in a few weeks. I also thought him kissing Adrian in the cafeteria where anyone could stumble upon them didn’t make sense as they were both closeted, and he did not know if Adrian even liked him.

Third, given the hate crime Doug committed against Kobe, which incited the story, and the abundance of videos of said hate crime, it should have been a much bigger deal. And Doug’s police-sergeant father shouldn’t have been able to make it go away as easily as he did.

I also thought Kobe was little more than a plot device and could have been used so much more to help Adrian come to terms with his sexuality and femmephobia.

I will say I’m glad Linn didn’t use the cliché of the homophobic bully who’s secretly gay. However, the reason for (spoiler) sending messages to Adrian was never explained.

Overall, I give Draw the Line 5.0 out of 5.0 stars and recommend it if you like queer geeky teens, comics, and superheroes.




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One Year Later: Seven Lessons Learned from Self-Publishing a Debut Novel

Introduction

Welcome, readers.

Last Thursday marked one year since the release of my debut YA dark Sci-fi/fantasy novel, Palingenesis. This post will explore the lessons I’ve learned from this experience, and I hope you find it helpful.

Those of you’ve who’ve followed me on Twitter (@silentbutcuddly) know I worked on this book for years, which leads me to my first lesson.

Lesson 1: Patience

 Like any activity, it takes time to hone your writing skills. Sure, it sucked seeing my feed filled with folks talking about their published works, but I wasn’t there yet. And if you aren’t either, that’s fine.

I got my start writing maudlin poems in middle school, then later wrote equally bad fan fiction.

My point being: take your time and allow yourself to write awful crap, break all the rules of storytelling, characterization, and world building. I know I did (lol).

Also, don’t fall into the trap I did of thinking your writing has to be perfect every time the first time or you suck. It’s a learning process, so be gentle with yourself. This assumes you actually write, which leads to my next point.

Lesson 2: Writers Write

One of the major reasons it took me so long to release my first book was because I didn’t write. I spent a good 3-5 years reading and watching everything I could about the various aspects of writing, but I never wrote. And when I did, it was only in spurts when I felt inspired.

The result?

 I didn’t cement the knowledge all the knowledge I learned, and for years I put off writing the story that was in my head because I feared I wasn’t good enough and no one would like it (fears I still have, but I’ve learned not to let them rule me.).

Then at 25 I had a turning point: I discovered Geoff Goins, his Tribe Writer Course, and the community that grew around him and his work. And it gave me the courage to stop playing at being a writer and actually write.

And while I wrote a ton in the ensuing years, I rarely showed my work to anyone, as my ego was too fragile to handle criticism, and my writing ultimately suffered for it.

Lesson 3: Don’t be Afraid of Putting Yourself and Your Work Out There

Like many writers, I’m an introvert and shy away from large crowds and meeting new people (sans my college days, when I frequented night clubs and got drunk on a weekly basis). But being a writer, especially an indie writer, requires you constantly pitch yourself and your work to people if you want to build buzz for your book.

I’m still working on this, but if I could do one thing over, it’s this. I’d reach out to more local media, book bloggers, and book influencers on social media.

I’d have also joined writing groups sooner to help me improve my writing.

 I didn’t work up the courage to seek one out until I approached thirty, when my therapist suggested I do so. They called themselves the Mad Hatters and met at Affirmation, a local LGBTQ+ center.

I was terrified the first time I went there, but everyone was kind, and over the next several meetings my confidence rose, and I started sharing my work and am still friends with some of the members to this day.

Unfortunately, this group fizzled out after a few years, so I drifted long, tinkering with my WIP, until I joined my current writing group a few years ago.

The group leader, Mychelle, welcomed me immediately and gave me tough love when needed to improve my luck. I credit her and the other members with giving me the final push to publish Palingenesis.

Lesson 4: Write, Revise, Release, Repeat

Image by Felipe Spinola via scop.io

I used to marvel at writers who could work on multiple projects at once, as I could only focus on one story at a time. But I’ve since learned this was an excuse I used to stop myself from releasing my work.

My logic went something like this: if I only focused on one project at a time, I could make it perfect. But the truth is no story will ever be prefect, and this was just a stalling tactic on my part. I’ve now learned to juggle multiple projects and have set myself a publication schedule for the next few years. As of this writing, I have three WIPs in various stages with plans to start two more next year. But what changed?

COVID-19 happened.

Pandemic Panic

Like many of us, Covid turned my world upside down. For the first several months of the pandemic, I was a virtual hermit, only going out to buy groceries or refill my medications, and always masked up (which I continue doing today).

As I mentioned above, I’m an introvert, but after the first month or two or little human contact, my anxiety and depression skyrocketed to the point getting sick and possibly dying were constant thoughts, but as I wrote here, I had an epiphany.

I didn’t want to die without having published anything, so I redirected all that anxiety into finishing my WIP, and I contacted an editor friend on tweeter and submitted my manuscript to them.

My editor’s initial notes weren’t good and amounted to me needing to do a complete rewrite. And ya’ll, it devastated me.

Lesson 5: Dust Yourself Off and Try Again

After I received those editor’s notes, I was tempted to give up, but after I got over myself, I realized a rewrite was an opportunity to improve my book. And I’m glad I chose that route instead of being all butthurt and up in my feelings.

So much of writing, especially for indies, is fraught with setbacks and rejections. But like Aaliah sang, “If at first you don’t succeed, dust yourself off and try again.”

From personal experience, I know this can be hard to do when your timeline’s full of people talking about their book/TV/movie deals while you’re still an unknown writer.

I’m not gonna lie, I thought Palingenesis would be the next Harry Potter or Percy Jackson. But like I said, my sales reports determined that was a lie.

I had all these expectations, but after it released to no commercial or critical success, it crushed me. I thought about quitting writing.

However, don’t let this discourage you from dreaming big. Yes, keep your expectations for your first book low, but don’t let poor sales stop you from writing the next book and the one after that.

When I calmed down, I told myself one book won’t make or break me. And it won’t you either. Click here to read a post I wrote a while back on staying positive during your publication journey.  

So, I’m working on other stories, and it might take a while, but eventually I’ll find success. And I know you will too.

Lesson Six: Success Looks Different for Everyone

There’s a maxim that says writers need to have published at least twenty books to earn enough income to be full-time writers. But success is different for everyone. While books may be one writer’s only source of incomes, others might do speaking engagements, classroom visits, be writing coaches or editors on the side. And most writers have day jobs.

I know of indie authors who also make comics/manga and video games/board games based on their stories. My point being, don’t limit yourself to one medium. Define what success is for you, the means of achieving that, set goals, and take steps to achieve them.

One way I plan to build my readership and make extra money is by publishing short stories on Amazon for $1-2 each. I also plan to do book signings at local libraries once things with COVID-19 settle down and apply to book festivals and anime/comic cons to sell my books. I’m also planning to get certified as a copy editor and developmental editor in the next few years.

But all of this would be pointless if I didn’t have a greater reason for writing.

Lesson 7: Your Reason for Being a Writer Must be Greater than Yourself

Interrogation point in digital thumb print

 The starving artist is a cliché for a reason; most books only sell a few hundred copies in their lifetime and most writers, indie and traditionally published, earn less than $10,000 a year. So, if money is your sole motivation to become a writer, prepare yourself for a world of disappointment.

I learned this the hard way. The truth is people release hundreds of books every day, and even with marketing and a ton of luck it’s rare to make it big, especially as a debut indie author. So, your reason for writing must be bigger than financial gain, bigger than yourself, or like so many others, you’ll lose your passion and quit.

As I’ve previously mentioned, when sales of Palingenesis didn’t meet my expectations, I pondered quitting writing and doing something else with my life. But then I remembered why I started writing in the first place.

Coming of age in the late 90s/early 2000s, there were few positive depictions of LGBTQ+ folks and fewer still of geeky Black and brown queer people like me. So, I decided to change that by filling the world with all the stories I wished were around when I was a kid.

And I cling to this raison d’etre when things aren’t going well in my writing or personal life, because it’s not about me and getting my ego stroked.

 It’s about all the LGBTQ+ youths of color out there starving to see themselves and their narratives in the media they consume. It’s about affirming they are just as worthy of dignity, love, and respect, that they too can be heroes and heroines; and that, yes, their lives matter.

You too must also find your why and return to it again and again when the world knocks you on your ass, because trust me, it will.

Look within and honestly ask yourself what impact on the world do you want your books to have. And go from there.

 An excellent exercise for discovering your why is to craft a mission statement like businesses do. Start by listing all your hopes and goals, then drill down into what’s most important to you, and refine it until you’ve laser-focused on why you write.

This may take several tries, but once you’re done, print it out and post it somewhere you’ll see it often, so you can turn to it during those dark times in your life and remind yourself what you’re working towards.

Conclusion

  The advent of the internet, e-books and e-readers, and self-publishing platform like Amazon’s KDP and IngramSpark have allowed anyone to become a writer. But competition for readers has never been fiercer. Add in the ever-increasing myriad of other things vying for people’s attention and it’s a miracle books are as popular as they are.

It’s difficult being a writer, especially a debut indie author. And if I had it to do over again, I would have lowered my expectations, started much sooner, and reached out to more people.

I hope you learn from my mistakes and your debut goes better than mine did.

As for me? I plan to take the lessons I’ve learned and use them to help me streamline the process for my next book release.

Thanks for reading and have a great day.

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If you’ve enjoyed this post and found it helpful, please share it on social media. And if you’re a seasoned writer, add any useful tips or lessons you’ve learned in the comments.

Also, personalized signed paperbacks of Palingenesis are still available here, while supplies last.

Review: Cute Mutants Vol. 3

Cute Mutants Vol 3: The Demon Queer Saga by S.J. Whitby

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


The Demon Queer Saga by SJ Whitby is the third entry in the Cute Mutants series and picks up where book two left off.

Now running Jinteki Industries, Dylan and company have turned the evil corporation into a force for good, creating a haven for mutants and their families. However, they must contend with Abigail Tanner, a member of America’s Extrahuman Military Intelligence Department (EMID), that seeks to take control of the Cute Mutants and their operations.

Dylan also has to deal with the pressures of being a mutant leader and role model; and Violet, who’s obsessed with Dylan, can teleport and turn her fingers into blades, and whose stated goal is to kill Dylan.

If that weren’t enough, the Cute Mutants also must fight off Quietus, a group of religious fanatics whose goal is the extermination of all mutants.

Though this book is darker than the previous one, I loved how Whitby depicted Dylan’s reactions to the pressures of leadership and their moral struggles with how to handle the threats of Violet, EMID, and Quietus. I also loved the evolving mystery behind Emma and her powers, and those of the other Cute Mutants.

As with the previous book, Whitby introduced more mutants. However I did feel Lou was once again pushed to the sidelines in favor of showcasing the new mutants and Dylan and her friend group.

It was nice to see Dylan and the others maturing a bit, but I still thought some of their actions stretched my suspension of disbelief, given how dangerous they know the people after them were.

If I had any other criticism it’s that while several characters died in the ensuing fights with EMID and Quietus, I felt like Dylan and the other main characters were never in any danger due to plot armor.

I was also high-key angry the book ended on such a massive cliffhanger. Thankfully the next book is available, otherwise I’d be hella pissed.

I give Cute Mutants Vol. 3 5.0 out of 5.0 stars, and highly recommend it. If you liked the first book, I strongly suggest buying the rest in the series as they only get better.




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Be Your Own Superman: On America’s Obsession with Superhero Movies

photo by Aliekbar Ozturk via scop.io

Introduction

For over a decade now, superhero movies have dominated the box office.

But they have been a thing since the 1920s with the Zorro movies, and then enjoyed a resurgence in the ‘70s and ‘80s with the Christopher Reeve Superman movies, the Indiana Jones movies, and Star Wars Episode 6-8.

Then in the ‘90s there were several misses, such as Captain America (1990), the Michael Keaton Batman Movies, the spate of Videogame movies like Street Fighter (1994), Mortal Kombat (1995) and its sequels and Spawn (1997).

In the 2000s came the Tobey Maguire Spiderman trilogy and the Bryan Singer X-Men trilogy and more video game movies like Blood Rayne (2005) and House of the Dead (2008). As the decade closed, we got our first Marvel movies: The Incredible Hulk (2008) and Captain America (2008).

Soon DC joined the party and Disney got in the mix with its purchase of Lucas Films and Fox’s entertainment business, and they and Marvel have been battling to see who can produce the most profitable movies.

But why have superhero movies proven so popular?

I argue there a three main reasons for this: the decrease of job stability and wealth accumulation because of globalization and the wealthy disparity between the 1% and the 99%, the distrust and destruction of civil institutions and politicians, and the victim narrative and the need for an authoritarian father figure.  

I’ll discuss each in turn.

The 1% and Power Fantasies

Per this CNBC article from 2021, the top 1% have 16 times the wealth of the bottom 50%, but how did this happen and what does it have to do with superhero movies?

 First, the answer to America’s wealth disparity is simple: neoliberalism and globalization.

Beginning in the ‘80s with Regan and his trickle-down economics, the powers that be enacted policies that drastically lowered the tax rates of the wealthiest 1% while raising those of working-class folks and keep their wages flat. All while productivity skyrocketed.

 They also took measures to bust unions, and businesses that could, eliminated their workforce via automation or outsourced those jobs to countries where they could pay their workers slave wages.

The result being, a family could no longer survive on the minimum wage and both parents now had to work, often multiple jobs, with little job security.

If this weren’t bad enough, corporations legally bribed politicians on both sides to write laws in their favor, shifting the power from the people to them as they sought to destroy every public institution they couldn’t privatize or run for profit (see the US Post Office and higher education).

Broke, overworked, tired, and unable to get a higher education because of the staggering cost of college, is it any wonder people want to watch something where they can fantasize about being omnipotent or close to it?

Power Fantasies

Enter superhero movies, premade for such a thing as they are ultimately power fantasies.

What’s a power fantasy? you might ask.

In simplest terms, a power fantasy is any media that features larger than live characters who can do things like take on an army by themselves or punch out a god. They aren’t meant to be taken seriously and are quote: “something you can watch and turn your brains off.”

But the problem with turning your brain off is you’re not aware of what’s happening around you, and the 1% takes advantage of this.

 I’m not a conspiracy theorist by any means, but have you ever stopped to ask why the media is pushing these movies so hard, beyond they’re safe money makers?

As George Carlin said, “That’s why they call it the American Dream, because you have to be asleep to believe it.”

The truth is, those in power don’t want us to be woke; they want us dumbed down, so we don’t realize how they’ve robbed us blind and turned us into wage slaves. They want us in a constant state of fear or anger, so we don’t see the sleight of hand they’re doing to usher in fascism and a police state.

They don’t want us to think so we don’t question why the powers that be aren’t held to the same laws as us. But most of all, they want us asleep, so we don’t see they’ve ridged the game against us and we revolt.

If we’re asleep, waiting for a Superman to save us, then we won’t see the Lex Luthers stabbing us in the back.

Superhero Movies and The Victim Narrative

What’s the one constant of superhero movies? Regardless of which movie you watch, they all feature said superheroes saving people who are powerless to save themselves.

But have you ever stopped to ask why?

 It’s because these movies train us to be victims, teach us we can’t do anything ourselves and need a strongman to save us.

Think I’m off base?

 Look at the mystique surrounding Hitler during his rise to power. The Nazi diehards believed Hitler was their savior, chosen by God to save the white Aryan race.

 Now compare what those on the extreme right believe re: Trump. They believe he’s their god-king-emperor come to rescue them from the evils of CRT and those filthy LGBTQ folks trying to grooming their children.

  In both cases, you had a population that felt disenfranchised and turned to an authoritarian to save them, much like the people in superhero movies turn to those in capes.

 Enter the victim narrative, which says we aren’t responsible for what happens to us: God, the state, or insert your favorite politician/celebrity will save us.

While we’d like to think of ourselves are highly capable under pressure, the truth is everyone is a hero until the bullets fly. This is why the victim narrative is so insidious; it allows people to abdicate responsibility for their actions and life to others and thus robs them of their power and creates the conditions for the rise of fascism.

Why bother doing the hard work of effecting change, when you can sit on your ass every day and bitch about things online? Why bother running for office when you can wait for someone to do it? After all, you’re powerless.

 So, when a politician in the mold of Trump, Le Pen, or Erdogan comes along, promising to fix everything if only you give the power to do so, people line up to vote for them. They readily relinquish their freedoms hoping to be saved from the evils of the world. What’s a little police state if it means you can feel safe, working your dead-end jobs until you’re fired or die? Whichever comes first.

Often people give politicians superhuman, almost godly qualities, much like the characters from superhero movies. How often have you heard some variation of, “Don’t worry. X will save us!”, as though they’re some modern messiah?

 The truth is people are quick to ascribe to others the spark of divinity within them, which brings me to my next point.

Superheroes, Politics, and Religion

For those unaware, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman in 1933 in a self-published magazine that failed to sell in their Ohio town before he took off in later years. Both being Jewish, their creation Superman has many messianic qualities. From his super strength, speed, intelligence, and near invulnerability to his Kryptonian name Kal-El, Superman has all these divine qualities to him. Even the name Superman evokes one beyond that of a mere mortal.

And some heroes like Thor, and Wonder Woman are literal gods. Even fully human heroes like Batman have monikers that evoke the supernatural: The Dark Knight, The Bat, The World’s Greatest Detective. And this link between superheroes and religion has been acknowledge by comic book creators as in 2015’s Justice League: Gods and Monsters, a direct-to-DVD animated film set in an alternate universe where the Justice League is an authoritarian group that enforces justice by any means necessary for the good of the people.

 People are in awed and fear them in much the same way they do the Abrahamic God.

And like God, superheroes traditionally come in two types: those that do everything except kill people, like Batman, and those that do kill like Wolverine and Deadpool.

Of the latter, they’ll still considered the good guys because they kill bad people, like the God of the Bible. The reason I bring this up is because of how entrenched Christianity is in Western Civilization, thus how primed western audiences are to messianic imagery and rhetoric surrounding those in powers and those attempting to gain power.  

When people like Marjorie Taylor Greene or Obama invoke God in their speeches, what they’re telling their followers is, “I’m the chosen one you’ve been waiting for. Pick me! I’ll save you from X.”  

Again and again, we see politicians projecting themselves as being modern superheroes here to liberate people from the ills-de-jour. And they often win, because like the superheroes and the God of the Bible they’re imitating, they play to a binary view of morality: we’re good, they’re evil. We’re right, they’re wrong. We’re smart, they’re dumb, etc. And because they are from the ingroup, anything they do wrong, people often handwave it away because they’re doing it for the greater good.

Where have we heard that before?

When God does something we’d disagree with, were it anyone else, the old reply is, “He works in mysterious ways.” And when superheroes do something morally questionable, rarely are they called out for it or suffer the consequences because they saved the day.

Blind faith in anything, be it God or a politician, does no one any good, and reenforces a victim mentality. It also teaches us to be reactive instead of proactive. Holding out someone will save us instead of saving ourselves.

We become bystanders, afraid to act because we’ve given up our power to others. And ultimately, it teaches us to be irresponsible for ourselves because God/politician/hero is in control and will fix everything.

But you must be a true believer.

Fanboyism and Jihadism

Another thing the Abrahamic religions have in common with comic book fans is their militantism. As God is the same today tomorrow and yesterday, all attempts to change superheroes have resulted in some fan responding with vitriol, including death threats to the writers who dare change their beloved comics (see Comicsgate and the controversy over Iceman coming out as gay, making Thor and Iron man female, and Captain America Black).

Ultimately, it’s this tribalism in both groups that lends itself well to the rise of fascism and authoritarians.

But how do superhero movies do this?

Plot? What Plot?

 All superhero movies are effectively the same; they’re either origin stories or about them facing an enemy, being overpowered, only to regroup and win in the end. But more than that, they focus on brawn over brains, driving home the message might makes right.

 Seldom do they focus on the consequences of wrecking half a city to beat the villain of the day. And when they do, it’s only for the first act or so, then it’s right back to fighting the villain de-jour.

 And when they do focus on the psychological and physical trauma these characters go through, it’s often part of their origin story, a la Spiderman. Hell, Batman raison d’etre is because of his failure to address the childhood trauma of witnessing his parents being murdered. Like a good third or more of superheroes could use therapy on the regular.

Moreover, they are generic, bland, and safe, rarely getting higher than a pg-13 rating. Even highbrow movies like The Dark Knight and its sequel still had plenty of explosions and fight scenes to keep the masses entertained.

And it’s this genericness that allows people to turn their brains off and put themselves in the cape of their favorite hero, completely unaware of all the messages and lessons these movies are priming them for.

Conclusion

I’m not saying superheroes movies are inherently bad, but that they contain some bad messages and lessons that we need to be aware of. The truth is, they are just one prong in the elite’s arsenal, who want us dumb, angry, and asleep so we don’t realize they’re screwing us all.

But we can change that if we wake the fuck up.

We don’t need any deity or superhero to save us. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for, and it times we acted like it.

 Inside us all is the ember of a hero, a phoenix waiting to rise from the ashes of our fears. If only we are brave enough to pick ourselves up and fight the good fight.

Thank you for reading. Let me know your thoughts in the comments and be sure to share this post with your friends if it resonated with you. Also, sign up to my newsletter for this and other writings.

Review: Cute Mutants Vol. 2

Cute Mutants Vol. 2: Young, Gifted & Queer is the second entry in SJ Whitby’s YA fantasy series about a group of New Zealand teens who gain superpowers after kissing the same girl at a party.

It picks up several months after book one and finds Dylan and the Cute Mutants under the control of evil corporation Yaxley, who wants to use them as child soldiers for various missions, including capturing and killing other mutants.

While book one was mostly fluffy, book two took a much darker turn, including the deaths of several characters. And speaking of characters, we’re introduced to several new mutants, such as Katie, aka Dragon, who spits fire, and Alex aka Keepaway, a nonbinary teleporter.

I thought each of these new mutants had distinct powers and personalities, though I do think Katie got more than her fair share of page time at the expense of other characters, such as Lou who was barely in the book despite being an OG Cute Mutant.

I also thought the ending was insane, especially the revelation that other countries have mutants and will be after Dylan and her group since they’re now rogue.

However, Bancroft, Valen and Aurora; the Cute Mutants’ handlers at Yaxley; appeared one-note, and the way the kids’ parents reacted to Yaxley effectively kidnapping them to do shady stuff felt unrealistic.

The evolution of the OG mutants’ powers was interesting to read, and I loved the relationship Dylan formed with Onimaru, a samurai sword said to have slain demons. And I found their reaction to being made slaves of the government rang true.

Though, I thought Dylan acted immature, like when she got jealous of the bond Katie and Pear formed, or when Bancroft removed her as team leader for disobeying orders and replaced her with Dani. But she’s only eighteen, so she still has a lot of growing up to do.

I liked the sex scenes between Dani and Dylan as they were the perfect amount of use your imagination and fade to black without being too salacious.

The ending to the book was the definition of crazy; characters dropped left and right and by the last pages I did not know how the series would progress from there, but I’m hooked and bought the rest of the series.

I give Cute Mutants Vol. 2: Young, Gifted & Queer 5.0 out of 5 stars. 

Review: Cute Mutants Vol. 1

Cute Mutants Vol 1: Mutant Pride by S.J. Whitby

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Cute Mutants Vol. 1: Mutant Pride by SJ Whitby is the first entry in the Cute Mutants series of YA fantasy novels about a group of teens who gain superpowers after kissing the same girl at a party.

Initially, I found Dylan’s personality off-putting, but slowly I came to love her geeky adorable ass and the rest of the Cute Mutants.

I did think the pop culture references were a bit much and sometimes came off as a crutch for lack of worldbuilding/characterization. And because it’s told in first person with Dylan as the POV character, a lot of the other characters come off a little flat, especially Dani who’s barely in this first book.

However, I did like all the characters, and they acted like how teens are supposed to act: reckless, arrogant, and messy.

This is especially true when it came to the relationships. Lou and Dylan are best friends turned lovers who are the other’s only friend. And when the cute mutants get their powers and Dylan befriends them, Lou’s jealousy was understandable, if a bit over the top.

Likewise, the love polygon between Dylan, Lou, Alyse, and Dani felt authentic without veering into soap opera territory.

I loved that Dylan and many of the other Cute Mutants were LGBTQ+ and how organically Whitby incorporated that into the mutant plot.

Another thing I loved was how the characters had to face the consequences of their actions and deal with real world moral and ethical decisions. So often in stories like this, issues like mortality, collateral damage, and interference from police/government agencies are either ignored outright or severely downplayed.

My biggest complaint is that the book’s antagonist, Tremor, was very two-dimensional and at times was outright cartoonishly villainous in his motives and actions.

That said, I liked this book a lot and already bought the next in the series. I highly recommend this book if you like YA books with sarcastic geeky humor and diverse queer characters.

I give Cute Mutants Vol. 1: Mutant Pride 5.0 out of 5.0 stars.




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More Than Three Words: On Using Love Languages to Express Characters’ Emotions

Introduction

Welcome!

Today’s post will explore love languages and how we can use them in our writing to express characters’ emotions.

Without further ado, let’s begin.

Love Languages

Popularized by Gary Chapman in his 1992 book, The Five Love Languages: How to Express Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate, love languages are how people show their affection for others.

According to Chapman, everyone expresses and receives love in one of five ways or languages, which I’ll discuss next.

First up is Words of Affirmation, i.e. compliments. If this is your love language, then your heart flitters when your significant other says they love you or gives you words of encouragement. To you, words speak louder than actions.

Next is Quality Time. In this love language, it’s all about spending time with your partner and showering them with your undivided attention. If this is your love language, then a quiet night in with a candlelight dinner and massage would be your jam.

Third is Gift Giving, in which people show and express their love by giving presents. If this is you, then your heart swells at the thought of your partner dropping mad stacks on you, or you doing the same for them.

Fourth is Acts of Service, whereby you do things for others. For examples, growing up, my mother would often go without eating, so I and my siblings had enough to eat. On a less serious end, this could mean changing your partner’s oil, mowing the lawn, or doing the dishes for them.

Last is Touch, where you express your affections via hugs, holding hands, cuddling, kissing and sex.

While Chapman argues people have one love language, I am a mix of Touch and Acts of Service. But how can we use love languages in fiction to express our characters’ feelings for each other without having them constantly shouting “I love you!”?

I’ll explore this next.  

Uses in Fiction

But why is it important to have your characters do and say things other than I love you to show they care about each other?

Several reasons.

First, it comes back to the old age of show don’t tell. If you don’t show us two or more characters love each other, then no amount of I-love-you’s or kissing fests will prove it otherwise. You must build the chemistry between the love interests, and this is where the love languages come into play.

Second, use of love languages allows you to show the love interests’ building relationship. You can start by having characters do acts of service for each other or hold hands, then transition to cuddling or hugging as they’re relationship intensifies.

Third, using love languages makes for richer reading.

No one wants to read endless pages of characters declaring their undying love for each other if that’s the only way they express their feelings. For example, in my debut novel Palingenesis, Travis expresses love via acts of service, while his boyfriend Josh expresses it through touch. This makes for complications as Travis is touch adverse.

Fourth, they allow you to flesh out character personalities. For example, you could have a stoic character whose love language is Words of affirmation, or you could have a shy character whose love language is Touch or acts of Services and makes a grand romantic gesture in public.

Fifth, we can use them to show how a character cares about someone by having their actions at odds with their words.

An example of this in anime/manga is the tsundere trope, where one character starts out gruff/mean to everyone else, but slowly warms to their love interest. Travis is this to a T, while Josh is a textbook yandere, a character that starts off sweet and innocent before morphing into an obsessive often psychotic one.

Another example from my childhood is Helga Pataki from Hey Arnold, who bullies Arnold, yet has a shrine to him in her closet made of his discarded trash. There’s even an episode where she sees a therapist who points out how obsessed she is with Arnold and asks if she loves him.

Helga blows her off, but it’s clear from her actions and words she loves Arnold.

Other examples of this include how the writers of Supernatural often had Dean and Castiel joke about being boyfriends or had other characters comment on their close relationship for ten years, culminating in Castiel’s confession to Dean that he loved him in the second from last episode of the series.

They promptly sent Castiel to super hell, but my point is the confession wouldn’t have the effect it did had the writers not used loved languages; most notable by having Dean and Castiel sacrifice themselves for each other several times over the years.

Contrast this with Harry and Ginny, whose relationship had zero chemistry or page time dedicated to it. Harry goes from not even noticing her in Order of the Phoenix, to being obsessed with her in Half-Blood Prince. Hell, Harry and Draco had more chemistry. And even though I’m a Harry/Hermione shipper, I readily admit Hermione and Ron had more chemistry than Harry and Ginny.

Sorry, rant over.

But this leads me to my next point.

Romantic Tension

As I mentioned above, we can use love languages can to build romantic tension, as done in series like The X-Files, Law & Order: SVU, Bones, and other shows built on will they or won’t they.

If Booth and Brenan didn’t rush into danger to save each other, if Mulder and Scully didn’t gaze longingly at each other, their eventual confessions of love wouldn’t have the same effect it did.

By using Touch, Acts of Service, Words of Affirmation, etc. the writers could keep audiences hooked for years.

But not all love need be romantic.

Ace/Aro Rep

We can also use love languages to express platonic relationships, too. One of my favorite platonic ships is Yusuke Urameshi and Kuwabara Kazuma. Heterosexual platonic life mates, they show their affection through Touch, namely fighting each other. Hie and Karama also get a shout out as demon bros for life. Goku and Vegeta from Dragon Ball Z are similar, in that they start out as rivals before becoming friends who would sacrifice themselves for the other.

But my all-time favorite platonic relationship is that between the boys from Stand By Me. There’s something so wholesome about watching them laugh and joke around with and stand up for each other. A lot of writers could learn from this movie.

But I digress.

Conclusion

Let me end this by stating emphatically, there is nothing wrong with having your characters say, “I love you.” But this shouldn’t be the only way they express their feelings for each other. Have them run the other a bath, do their taxes, rub their feet after a long day at the cash register, buy them feminine products when they’re low, give them a pep talk when they’re down, buy them their favorite chocolates or that outfit they’ve been eyeing, and say I love you!

Thank you for reading and if you enjoyed this post, please share it with your friends and let me know your thoughts in the comments.

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Review: The Adventures of Trash Rat

The Adventures of Trash Rat by Daniel Aegan is a coming of age story about Almond, the eponymous trash rat, and his raccoon best friend, Oumar. They must go on a quest to destroy a magic ring Almond’s sister found.

I was skeptical about this story at first, because it’s not the type of book I usually read. But I’m glad I took a chance on it. I loved how Aegan blended philosophy and character development with his world building, so as Almond grows, so too does his and the reader’s understanding of Raminath.

I also loved the relationship between Almond and Oumar. Almond’s optimism acted as a foil against Oumar’s cynicism, and vice versa. And though you can read their friendship as platonic, there was a ton of a queer subtext between them.

If I had any criticism, it’s that the ended fell a little flat and appeared anticlimactic to me. Also, there was a lot of head hopping.

However, I would love to read more about Almond, Oumar, and Raminath.

I give The Adventures of Trash Rat 4.5 out of 5.0 stars.

30-Second Stories: What Political Ads Can Teach Us About Storytelling

image by Jeffrey Diehl via scop.io

Introduction

Welcome readers!

With primary season 2022 in full swing here in America, I thought it’d be a good idea to analyze political ads and what lessons they can teach us about storytelling. For those out of the loop, Americans vote for candidates in Congress every six years and the House of representatives every two years.

However, unlike in other countries where campaign spending is capped, in America candidates can spend unlimited funds on ads thanks to Citizens United, in which the Supreme court ruled corporations are people, money is free speech, and thus corporations can donate unlimited money to campaigns, political action committees (PAC) and superPACS. The former of which can donate directly to candidates and coordinate with them, while the latter can’t (but often do anyway).

As a result, in every election cycle, candidates flood Americans with emails asking for donations and bombard us with political ads.

Know Your Audience

But these campaigns don’t throw crap at the wall and see what sticks; they do their research and tailor each ad to a specific demo with a singular message that often boils down to their opponent is bad for X reasons but I’m good for Y reasons. And in recent years with the advent of social media, campaigns have been able to target their ads with laser precision to reach their intended audience, as seen in the 2016 when the Trump campaign used Facebook data harvested from Cambridge Analytica to target democratic voters disillusioned with Hillary Clinton and get them to vote third party.

 He also spoke to the feelings of disenfranchisement among older and working-class white people by harkening back to a simpler better time with his slogan, Make America Great Again, often shortened to MAGA.

 We also saw this in both Obama’s campaigns where he levied social media to connect with younger voters. In both cases, their ads spoke to their audience, admittedly in vastly different ways.

But how?

By speaking to their base, the hard-core fans who will go beyond voting for them to canvassing, calling, and taking people to the polls to vote.

How does this apply to writing?

 First, if you don’t find your base, your tribe, you may sell a few copies, but that’s where it stops. There will be little word of mouth, and few if any reviews. But by finding your base, you’ll have a crew of readers who will ride or die for you and your work and who won’t stop talking about you.

Second, if you don’t identify your base, any marketing and ads you do will fizzle out.

As I mentioned above, political campaigns may seem like they want everyone to vote for them, but they actually want higher voter turnout among their base than their opponents.’ This is because historically voter turnout has been low, especially in non-presidential elections, so while there may be more of them than you, it all boils down to getting out your base.

But how do you find your writing base?

You go where they go, frequent the websites they frequent, and connect with them. You find their likes and dislikes, their hobbies, their personalities, and their problems.

And you give them what they want/need.

Give Them What They Want

Political ads often prey upon people’s emotions, e.g. fear, anger, or uncertainty about the future. Again, going back to the Trump campaign’s 2016 run, they played on the fears and anger that white Americans and their values were being ignored and becoming irrelevant.

Likewise, in Lyndon B. Johnson’s famous daisy ad, which featured a little girl on a swing holding a daisy before it cuts to a picture of a mushroom cloud, only aired once. But the message was obvious: vote for Barry Goldwater and it’ll end with nuclear war with Russia.

In the infamous Willie Horton ad, which spawned a genre of attack ads based on racial fears, the 1984 George H. W. Bush campaign painted Dukakis as soft on crime by implying he would allow criminals like Horton on the loose to commit more crimes.

Horton, a Black man serving a life sentence for murder without prole, while on release on Massachusetts’ weekend furlong program, failed to return, and physically and sexually assaulted a white woman before a civilian later shot him.

 And more recently, Hillary Clinton’s 3AM ad with a red ringing phone, implied, then candidate Obama was ill prepared to handle the rigors of being president.

These quintessential attack ads did one thing: made people vote for the target’s opponent because they will stop the nightmare scenario from happening. They also created a us vs. them mentality, and if people are one thing, it’s tribal.

But how does this apply to writing?

Easy.

We all Want to matter

People want to be entertained. But more than that, they want stories that speak to them as a person. They want to be seen, to know they and their struggles matter, that they too can save the day and get a happily ever after.

The secret to giving readers what they want is to not try to please everyone.

 Instead, focus on one person, be that you or someone else, and write for them. Be specific and write from your experience. Write what scares you, what hurts, because if it resonates with you, it’ll resonate with others. Tell your truth, regardless of how ugly it may be or who may take offense, because your story demands to be told. Do this and you’ll find your audience and please them. But that’s not enough.

You must hook them and keep them hooked.

Hook The Audience Early

Because we live in a capitalist society, everything costs money, and political ads are no different. They, in fact, cost so much that they only have 30 seconds to hook audiences, keep them engaged, and tell their story.

Likewise, you only have a brief window to hook readers before they put your book down to do one of a hundred other things vying for their attention.

 One of the best ways to hook readers is by starting with a bang. While literal or metaphorical, you want your protagonists to be doing something when your readers meet them. One good way to insure this is by starting right in the middle of the action, aka in medias res.

Another way to hook readers early is by starting as close to inciting incident as possible, so they don’t have to slog through world building or character development that can come later.

Additionally, you could start at the end, then jump to the beginning, as masterfully done by Tarantino in Pulp Fiction.

You could also start by posing a question to the audience, such as in mysteries, and the quest to answer this question drives readers forward.

A similar technique is to add subplots with their own questions and move from one to another, answering one question as another arises to keep readers engaged and guessing what happens next.

But perhaps the best way to keep readers hooked is by making them care for your characters. They don’t have to like them, but they must feel something for them, and you do this by making your characters true to life.

We all have that one friend who reminds us of pretentious Holden Caulfield, bookish Hermione, or egotistical Victor Frankenstein; pull from your knowledge base and give your characters quirks and ticks of those you know. Make them act and sound like real people, complete with flaws and questionable morals.  

And once you’ve made readers care about your characters, send them on a journey that matters. Have them grow and change as the plot demands, not vice versa, and make them earn their endings.

But once the story ends, the actual work of getting reviews and further sales begins.   

Repetition, Repetition, Repetition

One reason political ads are often highly effective is a combination of superb storytelling and repetitions. During campaign season, you can’t escape ads; they flood the airwaves, internet, your email, phone (robocalls and texts), even video games are no longer safe as candidates have taken to appearing in games like Animal Crossing: New Horizons, MLB Live 08, and Burn Out Paradise.

The point being, repetition is key to building and growing your reader base. Research has shown it can take seeing an ad 3 times or more before people buy a product, which means you must be your own hype man for marketing your book. Of course, don’t engage in spam or dishonesty to get sales, but plug your book and talk about your writing often sopeople know it’s out there.

Yes, this means marketing yourself and your book (I know. It sucks.).  

Go All In

 If you don’t believe in yourself and your book, no one else will. Put everything you have into it and promoting it. Engage in hash tag games and Facebook groups, reach out to bloggers and your local media, run ads, do what you must to get the word out.

Because no one will care as much about your book as you.

One thing we can learn from political ads is how to be evangelists for our books.

Don’t back be shy about saying how much you love your characters and their story, how excited you are for people to meet them, and how much you hope readers get what you’re trying to do.

This too, means having an elevator pitch on lock and ready to go when asked what your book’s about, and what your next project(s) are. It also means having some way to connect with readers, be it on social media or via a newsletter, and keeping them posted on your work and yourself.

You could have the best book in the world, but if no one knows about it, then what?

This goes triple if you’re a self-published/indie author. If need be, take a public speaking course if you’re not naturally extroverted, read a few books or watch a few videos on Amazon ads, social media marketing, and growing your followers.

Do whatever it takes to let people know how outstanding your book is.

Conclusion

If you’re American,whomever you vote for in the midterms, do it because you’ve investigated them and their platform. None of the above matters if there’s no substance behind the candidate and the book.

Write stories only you can and fuck the haters.

In closing, I want to leave you with this quote from Marianne Williamson I think is apropos:

“Our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? Your playing small does not serve the world. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.”

Thank you for reading and let me know your thoughts in the comments. Also, share this post if it spoke to you, and you can sign up to my newsletter for updates on me and my work here.

5 Lessons Tyler Perry Can Teach Us About Writing

Introduction

Welcome readers! Today’s post is all about Tyler Perry and the lessons we can learn from his life and writing process.

Perry’s CV

Often criticized and mocked for his formulaic movies and plays, Perry created a niche for himself by telling stories that resonated with his mostly Black Christian audience, which enabled him to become a multimillionaire and build a media empire.

But how did Perry get his start?

Long before he played Alex Cross, Perry wrote plays such as I Know I’ve Benn Changed that featured strong Black woman and Christian themes. Initially, Perry’s plays were met with poor reviews and at one point, he lived in his car.

 But he kept writing, editing, and retooling his plays until he they resonated with audiences in Atlanta and beyond.

He got his big break playing Medea in the movie version of Diary of a Mad Black Woman, based on the play of the same name. And it’s his role as Medea that Perry became famous playing and most reviled for.

From there he branched out into screenwriting for film and television, producing, and created a media empire. All because he didn’t give up. I’ll next explore the lessons we can learn from him.

Lesson One: Persistence

Had he given up when he was living in his car, Mr. Perry might not be the multimillionaire he is today, and his dedication to writing is something we can all learn from.

So often writers give up when things get hard, whether in their personal life or with their WIP. At the first hurdle, we’re ready to concede the race, but if we want to make it, then we can’t give up so easily.

You see this often with newbie authors, especially during NaNoWriMo; everyone is psyching each other up about writing a novel in a month.

Then come December, many of those same writers are nowhere to be found when the tough work of making that rough draft into something readable must be done.

You see the same thing in online writing communities where people will start off with such exuberance over their WIPs, only for them to nosedive once the reality of what it takes to be a writer sets in.

I speak of this from personal experience, as my debut novel took several attempts over many years and multiple rewrites before it was publishable. This is because I, like many new writers, only wrote when I felt inspired or when the stars aligned. But I’ve since learned from Mr. Perry’s example and others that you must be persistent with your WIPs or they won’t get done.

Likewise, you must give yourself the time and space to hone your craft as Mr. Perry did.

Lesson Two: Patience

As I mentioned above, when his plays bombed, Tyler Perry continued writing his plays, retooling them, but he also steadily built an audience until he got his big break.

So often we writers and creatives are in a rush to get famous, especially with social media flooding our feeds with news of people getting book and movie deals almost on the daily.

It’s so easy to become jealous and bitter at everyone’s apparent overnight success. However, we can’t let our emotions blind us to the truth: every overnight success was years in the making.

We must get good at our craft while building an audience for it; two things which Mr. Perry did that required patience.

When I first started writing, I had the mentality that if my book was good enough, people would just buy it.

 But that was not the case.

With more people than ever writing and releasing books, you need to market your book like crazy and build a readership.

  Hell, I’ve been on social media writing spaces for over a decade and am still trying to build my author platform. Which leads me to my next point.

Lesson Three: Find Your Audience and Give Them What They Want

Though he’s often criticized for recycling the same themes and plots, Mr. Perry’s audience continues to see his work, so they must like it. More importantly, he’s found his tribe.

But how did he do this?

Easy: repetition and iteration. By putting his work out there over time and fine-tuning it until it resonated with people, he found his audience, what they wanted, and continues giving it to them.

And so too must you if you want to build a readership.

Don’t be afraid to try hard and fail often on the way to success like Tyler Perry did. His work, like yours, isn’t for everyone, and the sooner you realize this, the better you and your work will be.

Though often disparaged for writing for the “Chitlin’ Circuit,” venues geared toward Black audiences in the Midwest, south, and eastern US, Tyler Perry found success here because he gave the market what they wanted, while remaining true to himself and his artistic vision.

It’s this razor’s edge we must balance if we hope to succeed. And you do this by sending your work out into the world and taking in the feedback you receive while retaining your vision for work.

But as you’ll see next, not all criticism carries the same weight and  you should ignore some of it, especially if it comes from those outside your audience.

Lesson Four: Screw the Haters

People often criticize Perry and his work for perpetuating negative stereotypes about the Black community and pushing his religious worldview. Critics claim Medea and other characters of his perpetuate the stereotype of the Mammy, and that Perry’s tendency to make the villains of his works dark-skinned and the heroes/heroines light-skinned is colorist and rooted in anti-Blackness. He’s also been called out for not using writer rooms and instead writing all his work himself.

I find merit in both complaints. However, there is no denying some of his critics are just haters and you’ll have your share of them too.

No work is universally loved, and writers must have a thick skin if they want to make it. And as I stated above, if you want to get better at writing, then you must be open to constructive criticism.

Had Perry not heeded the feedback he got on his early work he might still live in his car. However, there’s a difference between constructive criticism and straight up haters. The former is rooted in reality and should strengthen your work, while the latter is rooted in jealousy and/or outright hate of the creator or their work.

So take nothing someone says about your work as the gospel truth.

 While Perry’s movies often don’t score high marks from critics, he’s not writing for them. He’s writing for his audience, and so should you, as they are the ones buying your work. And Tyler Perry knows this well, which is why he continues delivering the same work with the same themes and characters.

Because they have proven to be profitable.

But as I’ll show next, Perry wasn’t content pumping out the same content. He branched out into TV shows, movies, acting, producing, and built a media empire.

Similarly, writers must branch out, which requires stepping outside of our comfort zone.

Lesson Five: Step Outside Your Comfort Zone

The success of his plays allowed Perry to transition to screenwriting for film and television, and eventually trying his hand at acting, making him a multimillionaire. But he’d never have gotten to this level of fame had he not taken the risk of stepping outside his comfort zone.

As writers and creatives, we can get so attached to a genre, theme(s) and characters, they we cease growing and pigeonhole ourselves. Sure, write what you love, but if you aren’t willing to take risks with your work, it’ll result in stale stories that will bore your audience.

Moreover, don’t wed yourself to a single medium. As writers, we can create stories for comics, manga, video games, and other media outside of books. And with the advent of the internet and social media, we can experiment with various platforms such as Kindle Vella, Amazon’s serial novel platform, Webtoons, and other online comics/manga sites to get our stories out there.

The point is to experiment and find what works best for you to connect with your audience and give them what they want.

Of course, with any experiment, there will be failures, but if one thing fails, you keep going until you find something that works. Give yourself permission to try new things and fail hard often. Don’t be afraid to say yes to an opportunity, even if you aren’t sure you can do it. Treat everything as a learning experience and reiterate your process until you’re where you want to be.

This’ll mean facing your fears, and one of the biggest we must slay is that we and our work aren’t valuable.

So often you see the advice to give away your best work, but your endgame should be creating multiple streams of income from your writing, as Perry has done. And you can’t do that if you’re paid in exposure, or you severely devalue your work. You’ve spent months/years working on your WIP, so you deserve to get paid well for it.

By stepping outside your comfort zone, you just might find your next hit, and if you’re lucky, become the next Tyler Perry.

Conclusion

Love or hate him, there’s no denying Tyler Perry has found his audience and continues to give them what they want time after time. You might not agree with his process, but then every writer has their own way of doing things. So, take what you will from this post, then go out into the world and write your asses off.

Thanks for reading this post and let me know your thoughts in the comments below.

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Review: Queer As Hell

Queer as Hell by Justin F. Robinette

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


Queer As Hell is a queer horror anthology by MTL.

However, it lacked in both the horror and queerness. Most of the stories only had a fantasy/paranormal element, and the queerness was rarely more than subtext. Also, many of the stories ended just as they were getting interesting, leaving you feeling cheated.

While there were a few stories I enjoyed, such as Attachments, by Justin F. Robinette, in which a ghost haunts his former lover who spurned him; and HUSAVGUD, by Bernardo Villella, in which a gay man must face his past to move ahead; most of the stories were forgettable.

Overall, I felt this anthology failed to deliver on both the horror and queer aspects and pulled a bait and switch. I give Queer As Hell 2.0 out of five stars and don’t recommend you read it.




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