By
Amanda Earl (Guest Blogger)
I’d
like to see a literary reboot of Little Women
where Jo is gender fluid and Laurie is the March family’s gay pal.
Or a sequel to Tom Sawyer where Tom and Huck are
a couple of old queens reminiscing about their shenanigans on the
Mississippi.
The
most unconventional romance I read this year was Glutton
for Pleasure (Samhain Publishing Ltd, 2010)
by Alisha Rai about a woman who falls in love with twin brothers.
Spoiler Alert: they all end up together.
Society
is bombarded by heteronormative monogamous tropes in our films,
music, literature and general culture. I like to discover
alternatives and offer them. My favourite characters are those who
can’t or won’t even try to fit in to a white picket fence
lifestyle where their goal is to own a house with a two-car garage,
work at the same job all their lives and find “the one.”
I
hear a new Bridget Jones movie is imminent. Wouldn’t it be cool if
Darcy, Bridget and Daniel shacked up together in a bisexual love
nest? Or to go back to “Pride and Prejudice,” instead of a remake
with zombies, how about a remake with queers? Or queer zombies even.
I
like plucky characters who struggle to figure out where they fit in.
Some of my favourite recent reads were Daniel Allen Cox’s
Mouthquake (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2015), set in Montreal, where
a young gay man with a stutter tries to figure out his place in the
world. It’s a beautifully poetic and poignant work. I love Heather
O’Neill’s Lullabies for Little
Criminals (Harper Collins, 2006) whose main character,
Baby, is a thirteen-year-old girl with a drug-addicted father and no
mother. She has to learn how to survive, squatting in old crumbling
houses or on the streets with the hookers, pimps and con artists. Kid
Stuff by Tom Walmsley (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2003) and
pretty much all of his writing deal with people living lives of
poverty on the wrong sides of the tracks who are dealing with
violence and crime, and often struggling with their sexuality.
As
a reader, I am always relieved when I read about such characters,
whose lives represent more of what I’ve experienced. As a writer I
feel the need to offer readers characters and stories that don’t
fit in with the so-called (North) American dream of happiness and
success.
I
wrote a poetry book entitled Kiki (Chaudiere Books,
2014) inspired by Kiki of Montparnasse, a renegade model, cabaret
singer, renaissance woman who fucked a lot of different artists in
Montparnasse between the wars and didn’t apologize for it. And many
of my stories so far (Coming Together
Presents Amanda Earl, 2014)
are about characters who rub against the smooth veneer of society.
My
latest work, the erotic novel A World of
Yes (DevilHouse, 2015) is about Bonnie Clowd, a
thirty-five-year-old single woman who’s trying to figure out what
she wants out of life. She’s not sure she’s cut out for monogamy
or even heterosexuality, and is surrounded by people who are highly
sexual and aren’t ashamed of being so. When I write, I can create
the kind of world I want to exist with a few roadblocks along the
way. That’s great fun and very satisfying.
I
enjoyed writing the characters in A World of
Yes, particularly Bonnie. I am fascinated by people and
have an insatiable curiosity about their lives, their inner thoughts,
the secrets they hide and their values. Bonnie gets herself into some
silly situations that evoke Bridget Jones or Lucille Ball. Life is
absurd and often full of comedic moments. I want my characters and my
writing to reflect that as well.
I
recently told a dear friend that I make up characters like I used to
make up imaginary friends when I was a child and for the same reason:
because I am lonely. I am lonely in a room full of people at a party.
I don’t fit in with the status quo. I’m a polyamorous, happily
married woman in my early 50s with an insatiable libido and a kinky
side. I don’t find a lot of role models or kindred souls around
either in real life or in fiction. I feel like I am an alien who came
from a different planet.
Everything
I write or create is an attempt to connect with fellow aliens. I have
to believe they’re out there. Bonnie is one of them.
Here’s
a
short
excerpt
from
A
World
of
Yes,
to
reveal
a
wee
bit
about
Bonnie’s
character.
A
longer
sample
can
be
found
on
Smashwords.
I wrap myself in robe and sit on the bed to paint my toe and fingernails. I’ve never understood how other women manage to do this without making a huge mess and looking like accident victims. I have a hard time bending down to reach my toes. I’ve tried various contortions, feeling like a Cirque du Soleil acrobat. Often I call on Esmeralda or Charlene to help out, but there’s no time, so I plop my foot up on the Complete Shakespeare. ‘Out damned spot!’ I think as I take the nail polish remover and a cotton pad to remove the extra polish I’ve managed to schmoosh all over my toes, and even on my elbow somehow. The fingernails are easier, but I still have to sit around for a good fifteen minutes letting them dry. I have a habit of doing this at the very last minute so that they stay wet. It’s not unusual for me to walk out the door with a smush of nail polish on my index finger and a smear on my thumb.
Buy
Links
Drawing
for a free e-book! I’d love to hear your comments on any of the
above. As incentive, I’ll be drawing a name out of the comments box
on January 9 to receive a coupon for a free e-copy of A World of Yes.
About
Me
Amanda
Earl
is
a
Canadian
publisher,
poet
and
pornographer
who
lives
in
Ottawa,
Ontario.
Her
novel
A
World
of
Yes
(DevilHousePress,
2015)
is
available
as
an
e-book
on
Amazon
and
Smashwords.
Her
poetry
book,
Kiki
came
out
with
Chaudiere
Books
in
2014
and
a
collection
of
smutty
fiction,
Coming
Together
Presents
Amanda
Earl
was
published
in
2014
also.
Amanda
is
the
managing
editor
of
Bywords.ca,
Ottawa’s
literary
hub
and
the
fallen
angel
of
AngelHousePress
with
its
transgressive
imprint,
DevilHouse.
After
a
near
death
experience/health
crisis
in
2009,
Amanda
insists
on
leading
a
vigorous
life
that
focuses
on
love,
lust
and
whimsy.
Read
about
her
in
secret
at
http://amandaearl.com/
or
connect
with
Amanda
on
Twitter
@KikiFolle.
16 comments:
Congratulations on the new release, Amanda!
I'm looking forward to reading it.
thanks, Lisabet. & thanks for featuring me on your blog.
Can't wait to read this, even better if I could win it!
I think doing those kind of things with old characters would make for fun reading. I know I would read it. I love the remake on fairy tales.
debby236 at gmail dot com
Loved the original Tom Sawyer so this book should be a great read.
Congrats on the new release, Amanda. I like your idea of new takes on classic stories, the idea of Tom and Huck as a couple of old queens looking back at life & their shenanigans is AWESOME (Tom DID cross dress at one point :) )
thanks. good point about Tom. i'd forgotten :)
my book has nothing to do with Tom Sawyer alas. :)
how interesting
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
Yeah it's so frustrating when people generally have claustrophobic ideas about what being human is. Even just casual interactions wind their way into tight boxes. Look forward to reading Mouthquake and Little Criminals and gonna get me a copy of Coming Together. Thks.
i like how you put that. i hope you enjoy the books. cheers.
I love books that don't fit into the standard boy meets girl, they fall in and and live happily ever after. Give me a menage or more book any day of the week. if a little BDSM or kink is tossed in, even better. Can't wait to read A World of Yes.
Mindy is the winner of a free pdf copy of A World of Yes. congratulations, Mindy. thanks to everyone for commenting.
you've won the book, Mindy. sent you an e-mail to the account listed on your blog but haven't heard from you. give me a shout with your e-mail please.
ME! Thank you sooo much Amanda :)
Do you need my e-mail? I'm Birdsooong@comcast.net.
Thanks again Amanda :) Mindy :)
thanks, Mindy. i've e-mailed to you. happy reading!
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