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http://lyricalpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/wolfatthedoor333x500.jpgObsidian Moon, Obsidian Eye by J. Damask

I "met" Joyce, who writes YA as J. Damask, on Twitter through a mutual friend and was immediately intrigued by the premise of her books. I'm thrilled that she agreed to do a guest post for me on Chinese werewolves and her books. Signal boosts and link backs encouraged!
Her
website
Her
blog
Where to buy her books:
Amazon.com 
Barnes &Noble
Lyrical Press
Gumroad

"Chinese Werewolves in the writings of Joyce Chng/J.Damask"

When Catherine Lundoff asked me to write about the Chinese werewolves in my urban fantasy series set in Singapore, I actually rummaged through my head for things to write. Many people are curious about the Lang and desire to know more about them. I often reply that they were Chinese wolves, not the typical werewolves-doomed-to-change-during-full-moon, but wolves in human bodies. Some readers have said that they are more like spirit wolves. These wolves walk side by side their human counterparts, by all means Singaporean Chinese and indistinguishable. But like wolves, leery of strangers, of the crowd and of cramped spaces.  So, as I rummaged through my head, what should I write about the Chinese werewolves?

And, why Singapore? Because I was born and grew up on this island-state. I wanted to see an urban fantasy set in a familiar place. Of course, I have read about New York, London and other non-Asian places, and my heart hankers to read about a place I know. So, in 2009, I wrote the story out of a challenge to myself: write an urban fantasy novel/series set in Singapore. In actual fact, the story (and its background) had been simmering nicely in the back of my brain before I sat down to write. Nanowrimo gave me the impetus. I had also just given birth to my little girl. People thought I was nuts, writing a novel when I should be 1) resting and 2) focusing on baby girl.

I wanted to see a story about wolves who were also migrants in a foreign land. Wolves whose ancestors settled down in Nanyang (a term for Malaya for the migrant Chinese in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries) and sank roots down, carving their own niches for their packs/families. My grandparents were such migrants. The wolves too found a new home on a tropical island close to the equator. Like their human Chinese counterparts, they too have a rich culture and traditions.

Now, the wolves. I have always loved wolves and even my self-persona is a wolf. When I set out to write the novel(s), I wanted to see proper wolves, not the half-wolf, half-man raging monster made popular by Hollywood. The Lang have their own term for this monstrous state: ren lang (literally: man-wolf). For them, achieving this form twists the mind and renders the individual insane, a total antithesis to what a wolf is. The Lang, like their wild wolf cousins, desire to hunt, love their pack members and will do anything to protect pack territory. They love their freedom and green spaces so that they can run and hunt. They are also human in that they mingle with other Singaporean Chinese and work in human environments.

I like to examine the concept of duality, the idea of straddling two worlds. The main character/heroine, Jan Xu, is mother and pack leader, daughter and sister, wife and free soul. She leads the pack, and yet she is also a wife to a human man who loves her. She loves her children, and yet she has to be a purposeful and strong alpha to her pack. And she has to straddle between wolf and human – something that she struggles daily with in modern urban Singapore. A wolf would rather run and hide from the crowds and traffic.

There you go – my Chinese wolves distilled into a few paragraphs. I have high hopes for the Lang and the other non-human groups (the Myriad). Perhaps you might just see another series in the future.

 


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When I heard that Sunny Moraine, one of the wonderful, talented authors from our anthology Hellebore and Rue, had a novel cowritten with Lisa Soem coming out next week, I immediately asked her to write a blog post about the book, coauthoring a novel and whatever else she wanted to share. Line and Orbit will be released from Samhain Press on 2/5/2013; you can enter to win a copy on  Sunny's blog here and/or preorder it from Samhain or Amazon.

http://vervaceous.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/lineandorbit.jpg

A short synopsis:
Adam Yuga, a rising young star in the imperialist Terran Protectorate, is on the verge of a massive promotion…until a routine physical exam reveals something less than perfection. Genetic flaws are taboo, and Adam soon discovers there’s a thin line between rising star and starving outcast.


And without further ado, Sunny's post:

Hi. I'm Sunny. Many thanks to Catherine for offering a spot on her blog in which to talk about writing and also to plug Line and Orbit, the book I have coming out in a couple of days. I actually want to talk about not just writing in general, but what the specific process of writing this book has been like, because it's been, at least to me, interesting.

Read more... )
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this one up at Author Cathy Pegau's blog. I'm blogging on the topic of in-person events for writers.
http://cathypegau.com/?p=990

In related news, I was just asked back as a writer guest to Marscon 2013 (Mpls Marscon) and to the Quatrefoil
Library Women's Month Reading on 3/16 at the Anderson Library at the U of M. Looking forward to both! :-)
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My 2013 Lesfic Appreciation Event post on finding inspiration from historical women has gone live - check out the tag link to view the other posts
http://kbgbabbles.blogspot.com/2013/01/2013-lesbian-fiction-appreciation-event_2016.html?m=1#.UPL5F_15nTo

You can also view my post from 2012's event on lesbian protagonists in sf/f - http://kbgbabbles.blogspot.com/2012/01/2012-lesbian-fiction-appreciation-event_10.html?m=1


Signal boost - author Sue Bolich has just found out that her cancer has returned. She's interviewed by author Larissa Naic about her books (available at B&N and Amazon) and her health on the new BU Broadpod podcast - give it a listen and please buy a book or two if you can
http://broadpod.posterous.com/january-2013-s-a-bolich
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Today I'm welcoming Lori Selke and Djbril al-Ayad to my blog to talk about their forthcoming anthology, Outlaw Bodies (Future Fire, November, 2012). The TOC is here.

The Future Fire is an online magazine of social-political speculative fiction, with a particular focus on feminist, queer, postcolonial and ecological matters, is publishing a themed issue and anthology titled Outlaw Bodies, guest co-edited by Lori Selke. This is a brief conversation in which Lori asked TFF editor Djibril a few questions about the anthology.

 

Lori Selke: What about the “Outlaw Bodies” proposal appealed to you enough to choose it for The Future Fire? How did you feel it meshed with your larger vision?

 

Djibril al-Ayad: We received several proposals for guest co-edited themed issues/anthologies when we put out the call last year, all of which were very good ideas and at least several of which were strong social-political speculative themes that were right up our street. When my co-editors and I read through them all, though, we all immediately came back with Outlaw Bodies—there was no hesitation in taking on this collaboration from any of us. It was so obviously close to our interest in feminist science fiction and the intersections with queer, trans, disability and race issues, the proposal combined these elements into a coherent science-fictional context, and it already came with a kick-ass title attached. I’m sure it didn’t hurt that we could straightaway see the cyberpunk potential of

Read more... )



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I'm pretty excited to be in a Mind Meld at (Hugo Award-winning) SF Signal with David J. Schwartz, Kelly McCullough, Michael D. Thomas and Ay-Leen the Peacemaker - http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2012/09/mind-meld-directions-speculative-fiction-hasnt-taken/
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Looks I snoozed right through this one yesterday - my post on depictions of aging in SF/F has gone live on the Clarion Foundation's Writer's Craft blog. And it looks like we've got the start of a good discussion going.

Today, Silver Moon got a nice review from the
She-Wolf blog. The review also reviewed 3 other female werewolf titles so check out all of them to see if there's something you might like. I do love how nearly every reviewer has a favorite character, though I am beginning to wonder if I'll ultimately need to write a novel about each of them. :-)

And I got a nice note from author/reviewer/editor
Ashley Lister asking permission to use a scene from my vampire story "Twilight," published in Best Fantastic Erotica, Vol. 1 (Circlet Press, 2007)  for his new book on writing erotica. This is wildly flattering since Ashley does a ton of reviews and reads a LOT of erotica. I'm so glad that something I wrote to spoke to him enough to want to use it as a good example.

In other news, the trip back was pleasant other than torquing my arm and shoulder when my luggage rolled one way off a curb and I rolled the other last night. Ouch. Today is unpacking and working on a class proposal and laundry and working on interview questions for a blog interview. And stopping to ice frequently.




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When I heard that there was going to be a conference on female werewolves at the University of Manchester in the UK in 2010, I was terribly disappointed that I was going to miss it. Fortunately, one of the conference organizers, Hannah Kate, continued the discussion about female werewolves at her blog. And in June, 2012, she released an anthology: Wolf Girls: Dark Tales of Teeth, Claws and Lycogyny from Hic Dragones Press; I asked her to stop by and talk about her inspiration and her answers to the question: "Why female werewolves?"


Why I Love Lycogyny

Hannah Kate

A few years ago, I was working on my PhD thesis on late medieval romance narratives. I was writing about gender and monsters in fourteenth-century romance, and was particularly looking at some stories involving werewolves. I wrote about masculinity, noting that werewolves in medieval romance are exclusively male. I added a neat little footnote to the effect of: ‘On the whole, throughout Western culture, werewolves are usually male.’ Then, as an afterthought, I added: ‘Notable exceptions include the female protagonists of the Ginger Snaps trilogy and the character of Verruca in Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. A couple of days later, I added a few more (I think Clemence Housman’s werewolf and Perrenette Gandillon were next), and then a few more (An American Werewolf in Paris, Trick R Treat, the witchcraft trials presided over by Henry Boguet). Gradually, I added more and more ‘notable exceptions’ until the footnote took over the entire page.

With this, my supervisor said: ‘You are going to have to do something with that female werewolf footnote.’

So, I opened up the subject to discussion with other academics, and ran a conference in Manchester. We had speakers from throughout Europe, the States and Australia, and talked about female werewolves from history, folklore, literature and film. I then put together an academic book on the subject, to be published by Manchester University Press in 2013.

But that wasn’t the end of it. As well as being an academic writer, I am also a creative writer. While it was interesting to examine the female werewolf under the scholarly microscope, I also wanted to look more creatively at this compelling figure.


The earliest she-werewolves are found in witchcraft trials and tracts. But since the nineteenth century (or late eighteenth, if you think Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s ‘Cristobel’ is a werewolf tale – as some people do), female werewolves have belonged to creative writers, and, to be bold, I wanted to be part of this tradition.


Female werewolf fiction is going through something of a Golden Age at the moment, with some really excellent novels and short stories being produced. Mainstream TV shows like Being Human have also offered us some new – and complex – female werewolves. There is such a strong blending of traditions going on in these recent creations – Northern European folkloric elements rub shoulders with the sexual allure of the nineteenth-century she-wolves and the dark occultism of the sixteenth. North American literature and film often mixes non-European traditions of shapeshifting and shamanism into the European werewolf.


I have a few theories as to why the early twenty-first century might be such a fertile ground for female werewolf fiction. The current popularity of paranormal romance and crossover horror/fantasy fiction means many creatures once the preserve of fiction written primarily for and about men now appear in books for women. In these books, the female werewolf is more likely to appear as protagonist than sexy villain.


But, perhaps, there’s something more. It can hardly be denied that, in Western culture particularly, there is a worrying obsession with female body hair at the moment. I haven’t actually plotted a graph, but I’ve long been of the opinion that, as women are expected to remove hair from more and more parts of their body, there is an increased interest in writing about women who revel in their fur. Perhaps every time a woman gets a Brazilian, a female werewolf is born?

I decided to put together the Wolf-Girls collection to give an overview of the rich traditions that are at play in today’s lycanthropic fiction. A short story collection made more sense than a single-authored book, as I wanted to give a broader view of lycogyny, in all its complicated manifestations. When I opened submissions, I didn’t set any rules about what ‘female’ or ‘werewolf’ might mean – I simply asked for dark tales (and, as my own tastes run that way, I hinted the darker the better!)

The stories I received in response to my call for submissions did not disappoint. Rosie Garland, Andrew Quinton, Mihaela Nicolescu and Mary Borsellino offered gritty urban fantasy; Nu Yang and J.K. Coi’s contributions might be better described as horror. Serial killers, predators, brutality and gore run through all these stories.

Marie Cruz’s story drew on traditions of the ‘female Gothic’ and the association of werewolfism and mental illness; Beth Daley’s heart-breakingly tender (yet grotesque and shocking) tale draws on a now usually forgotten tradition of female werewolves and infanticide. Both Helen Cross and R.A. Martens dealt head-on with the question of body hair, but in quite different stories of hairy women. Jeanette Greaves and Sarah Peacock offered dark little visions of teenage life in the UK, inflected through science fantasy and Celtic folklore respectively; L. Lark’s story was influenced by Northern European folktales of shapeshifters.


Several stories belonged to genres not always associated with werewolf fiction: my own was cyberpunk-inspired; Lyn Lockwood’s was set in the Wild West; Kim Bannerman drew on medieval hagiography and Crusading narratives. And one story – Lynsey May’s – was told from a man’s POV, and focused on sexual desire and disgust.


These stories are worthy additions to a long history of female werewolf fiction. That’s not to say readers are likely to fall in love with the writers’ creations – these women are hardly eye candy – but I hope they will be gripped, frightened, repelled and delighted by them.

Wolf-Girls: Dark Tales of Teeth, Claws and Lycogyny is available now in paperback from the Hic Dragones website [www.hic-dragones.co.uk/wolf-girls], and in all eBook formats from September 2012.

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I've got a new post about marketing lesbian fiction in Issue #3 of The Scarlet Letter - http://scarlettiebooks.com/thescarletletter/the-highs-and-lows-of-promoting-lesbian-fiction-by-catherine-lundoff/

It is missing a link to this relevant post by author K. T. Grant - http://tinyurl.com/8hd762k

There are also some other pieces I'm looking forward to reading so be sure and check out the entire magazine.
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This time on the topic of marketing Silver Moon, complete with what I did by way of planning and all that good stuff, on author and editor Deborah J. Ross' blog. Deborah is the author and editor of numerous Darkover-related works as well as lively swashbuckling tales in her own universes (check out the Lace and Blade books that she edited). Once you've marveled at my guest post ("What? She has more to say about that book? Really?"), check out Deborah's serialized version of her novel Jaydium.

In other news, am home with a migraine and lingering clogged ear, though the infection has cleared up. Bleah. Posting during the intervals when my head will let me. More ice...


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GLB just hosted me for a guest blog on my favorite "starter" books with lesbian protagonists/themes. They did a really nice job of making me look good. :-) They'll be doing a post a day in honor or their review site's birthday so stop by and check them out.

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