Annie On My Mind Conversation

Remember that time that me and Cass of Bonjour Cass read Well of Loneliness and then talked/ranted/rambled to each other about it? Well, Anna of Future Feminist Librarian-Activist emailed be afterwards about doing something similar. We agreed to read Annie On My Mind by Nancy Garden. It was published in 1982 and is pretty much the classic lesbian teen book. Here’s what we talked about. I tried to warn about spoilers, but I may have let some small ones through.

Danika: I remember when I first read AOMM I thought there was something a little bit off about their relationship […] And now I think I know what bothered me. I don’t know if it’s because it’s set in the 80’s, or if it’s Nancy Garden’s writing, but they both seem a lot younger than what they’re supposed to be

Anna:
Yes! They’re supposed to be, like, headed for college and they act like they’re in middle school

D: I know it’s in a sort of self-conscious “girls our age aren’t supposed to do this” way, but I still liked it a lot better once I started thinking of them as 13-year-olds instead of 17-year-olds. And it’s not just them: even her little brother seems at least 4 years younger than his given age! And her classmates!

A: Yeah. I don’t think I noticed it so much when I was younger, because I read it when I was about thirteen myself? It was about the only lesbian YA novel my library had (early to mid-90s). To be fair, that was before the real boom in queer YA fiction. AOMM was probably one of the few available. And not a bad one to have if you’re only going to have one (no one dies!) … but yeah, I agree with you that, especially this time around I was left thinking, “wow, and these are supposed to be seniors?” It’s not even Annie’s imaginary world … it’s more the school politics and so on.

D: Yeah, the ear-piercing!

A: Like, no one has a real sense of a world beyond the microcosm of the prep school

Exactly!

D: Again, I was thinking “Well, maybe it’s just because this was 30 years ago…?” But it definitely seemed a bit off

A: Part of it probably is the era … and the fact that Nancy Garden was probably, on some level, harkening back to her own teen years which would have been in, what, the 1950s? 60s? When maybe ear piercing was more risque?

D: Aaah, yeah, that might have been part of it

A: I also wondered if maybe part of it was an attempt to make the drama center around something other than the fact that Liza was discovering her sexuality? So she invented another drama about the prep school that seemed kind of forced?

D: Maybe, but it turns into it being about her sexuality anyway

A: True

D: I remember when I first read AOMM I thought the girls’ meeting seemed really forced […] And I definitely agree with that the second time around. The singing, the sudden friendship… again, it’s the sort of way children interact, not teenagers

A: Yeah — teenagers are more self-aware, and self … restrained? I made instant best friends with kids in art class when I was, maybe, six! Not when I was seventeen. At seventeen I was like, well, maybe going for coffee after class and see how that goes.

But since NG wanted the girls not to be at the same school, she had to find a way for them to run into each other.

I’d forgotten how much class is an implicit part of the story. The way Annie comes from a “bad” part of town and everything.

D: I forgot that, too!

A: I was thinking, vis a vis reactions to queer teens, that it was interesting that Liza’s sexuality was more controversial in her upper-class world than it seems to be in Annie’s world.

D: On the meeting: Still, I think she could have done better than “Don’t stop [singing]. Please.” “Oh, you startled me!” That just sounds really forced.

Yes, because everything was controversial in Liza’s little world. I guess the ear-piercing was supposed to highlight that, but it seemed odd anyway. The only question with Annie was whether she was going to tell her family or not, so I don’t think we ever see how her school would have handled it, but presumably they have more important things to worry about.

A: It would have been irrelevent in Annie’s school (I’m assuming); no one cared about her there. I got the sense she was nervous about telling her parents, but her family was portrayed as fairly accepting and encouraging. I got the sense that they would have been baffled and maybe a little worried or hurt, but there wouldn’t have been all the drama that Liza had in her family and at the school.

It was interesting to me how it was almost reversed … or maybe that’s not quite what I’m thinking of. But today, we think of urban upper-middle-class folks as fairly cool about queer sexualities, etc. Whereas we think of lower-class people as reactionaries. Culturally. And in this story, the opposite was the case. I doubt those stereotypes would hold up, but it’s interesting that she chose to write it like that.

D:
That is the framework we generally use. But Liza’s privilege paralyzed her. Her school was so caught up in itself that no one could step out of line. It was a weird relation between them.

A: Yeah. Maybe I’m just to midwestern to understand the world of elite prep schools!

D: Yes, it was really weird seeing into that strange boxed-off world.

On a slightly different note, I was writing down some thoughts as I went, and on page 49 of my version, I thought Garden was foreshadowing the reaction to her coming out. It was when the parents found out about the ear-piercing, and the mom is pretty accepting, but the dad freaks out. [mild spoilers, highlight to read] So it surprised me later when he was actually really great about it.[end spoilers]

A: Good point. I was really intrigued by a number of the adults in the story, actually … and the way in which adults were portrayed in relation to the young people.

D: How so?

A: Well, I was impressed that the adults at [mild spoilers] the hearing were not portrayed as monoliths, as monsters, and that a couple were standing up to the schoolmistress, even if for their own reasons. [end spoilers] And I thought it was an interesting (and positive) choice to [spoilers] give the girls such human mentors, themselves lesbians of an elder generation. [end spoilers]

D: Yeah, that’s very true. The thing that stuck with me most about AOMM has always been the [spoilers] teacher couple .  Actually, the thing that stuck with me the most was their book collection. Lesbian books inside my lesbian book! Wow! The teachers’ [end spoilers] presence really made the story.

A: [spoilers] I agree about the teachers. In contrast to the charicatured headmistress and the reactive parents, the two teachers came across really human, but also kind and supportive, generous, and sheltering without being controlling. I wondered in my notes whether this was a conscious attempt to counteract the specter of the gay/lesbian predator? and yeah, it was fascinating to have the books play such a role in a couple of key scenes … from what I’ve heard from queer people of earlier generations, that was often the case! that they first discovered language for who they were from books … all the more reason to be a librarian-advocate for lgbtq teens 🙂 [end spoilers]

D: [spoilers] Aaah, I hadn’t considered that! Of course! Because the lesbian teachers were fantastic teachers. If I may quote my favourite line from the dad’s reaction (though he goes on to say he doesn’t think gay people can be truly happy), “Oh, look. What difference does it make if a couple of teachers are lesbians? Those two are damn good teachers and good people, too, as far as I know.” I mean, wow! Surprise acceptance! [end spoilers]

A: [spoilers] Hehe. Yeah, exactly. Because there’s that interesting conversation between the girls and the teachers after the teachers have been fired where the women acknowledge that if they don’t press charges, they should be able to get good references … because the school won’t want to admit that they fired the women for being lesbian … but they also fear for their ability to be hired if they were really out. So a real catch-22 [end spoilers]

A: Since we’ve talked a lot about where the story felt kind of forced … one of the ways in which I was really impressed with it was the fact that it a) had a couple of really sweet scenes in which the girls clearly make love, even if off-screen (so to speak) and b) that this is really seen as 100% a good thing, despite [spoilers] what happened with their teachers[end spoilers]. Their sexual exploration doesn’t spell doom for them as individuals or for their relationship. I don’t think many YA romances with straight couples were that whole-heartedly enthusiastic about young love back in the late 1970s …

Even Judy Blume’s “Forever,” despite the positive sexual experience, ends with the relationship ending.

D: That’s true. It’s a bit of a bittersweet book, because [spoilers] Liza gets suspended, nearly expelled for being gay, the teachers get fired, [end spoilers] and we know the whole time that they end up drifting apart after they leave for university. But it’s also a lot more positive than most of the queer books (YA or not) available at the time. They do [spoilers] end up together at the end [end spoilers], and there’s a lot of support of same-sex love.

I also liked reading it for all the tropes and patterns that young queer love, young closeted love takes. Like how you could totally tell they were in love with each other before they knew. Like the classic game of “how much physical contact can we hace before it means something?” (shoulders touching, hand holding, etc)

Oh, and it was also nice that neither of them really “went straight”. Annie was pretty sure she was gay, and Liza wasn’t sure, but was definitely leaning towards accepting it

A: Yes! Which I feel like is something that is still confusing to kids (or perhaps I only speak for myself) … since you’re trained, culturally, to expect that opposite-sex intereactions are laden, but not same-sex ones, so you aren’t so self-conscious and things kind of sneak up on you way more than with opposite-sex relationships.

D: Yes, exactly!

A: re: going straight, I agree! That actually seemed a little dated (in a nice way?) to me, since I feel like if this book had been written today, you’d get this whole “am I bi? am I gay? am I just questioning?” thing going on. Which is absent entirely: Liza comes to the realization she’s “gay” full-stop.

D:
That’s true, it definitely has that all-or-nothing mentality that we’ve (thankfully) shaken off a little more by now

Oh, wait, I take it back: Annie did try to be straight! Back when she was younger. In her words: “It was ridiculous.” That made me laugh.

They are super cute when they are together and happy.

A: Yeah, and as you say there was that added element of the reader being “in the know” in part because Liza’s spoilered it for us at the very beginning with the framing narrative.

What do you think of the function of the framing narrative as a literary device? Do you think it adds anything to the narrative that we kind of know it ends badly (at least in the short-term) before the story begins?

D: I was pondering that the whole book. I kind of get why she did it, because she needed the drama to keep the story moving through the happy couple parts, but it did add this element of doom that, frankly, no queer book really needs any more of. I guess it works overall, because we get the [spoiler] happily ever after following the long(ish) separation [end spoilers] and we process it with Liza as she processes (and processing is a classic lesbian thing to do), but I’m a little divided on it. What did you think?

A: Hmm. Tough question. Retrospective narratives can sometimes work pretty well, but I agree with you that the last thing any queer teen book needs is more angst! That’s why I adore David Levithan’s work so much — his love stories are so ebullient. As a kid, I always felt like the way Liza blamed herself for [spoiler] the punishment exacted on the teachers (or, more accurately, for having made love in their home while she was house-sitting … what the hell was so shameful about that?) [end spoiler] was really exaggerated. Like, shouldn’t she have been pissed at the secretary who had the vendetta? And the schoolmistress, etc.?

But maybe that’s a personality thing — I always had an over-developed sense of self-righteousness as a child 🙂

D: Ah, I loved Boy Meets Boy for that! It’s like a combination of cotton candy and sinking into a hot tub. It’s just so refreshing to read a happy queer love story. I still want my lesbian version of that.

Well, I can see why they were a little ashamed. [spoiler] In the teachers’ bed…? That’s bad taste. What I couldn’t see, though, was why they opened the door! They didn’t have to answer! -sigh- The secretary was definitely over-the-top. The absolute poision she was spitting out was painful to read.[end spoiler]

A:
re: Boy Meets Boy, totally! I feel like YA lesbian fiction is still waiting for its Daniel Levithan (if you have any recommendations, I’d love to hear them!)

[spoiler] re: teacher’s bed … I guess. I did a lot of house-sitting in high school and college and I always slept in the homeowner’s bed (clean sheets, granted) so it didn’t feel so weird to me. but that wasn’t in the deal Liza made with the teachers, so I guess that is a little different. Oh, totally with the door! *headdesk* why oh why did she have to answer????[end spoiler]

D: I don’t know of anything quite so positive, though I have read some good ones. Hello, Groin by Beth Goobie is my favourite.

[spoiler]Especially before getting dressed![end spoiler]

A: Despite [spoiler] the secretary’s religiously-motivated poison [end spoiler], I was actually surprised by how little religious conservatives and the religious right as a force opposed to sexual expression appeared in the novel (contrasting, again, with the way it figures in some Levithan stories) … I think that’s another way this dates the story, since it was set just as that force was gathering.

D: True, I mean, [spoiler] when she faces the commitee/council/whatever that was, they basically say “Hey, this is none of our business”, which is pretty good for the circumstances. [end spoiler]

A: Yeah, I think it’s interesting how the battle-lines are drawn ever-so-slightly differently than we’re used to in our generation. The religious element not quite so strong, the class element more so. Being queer still being a threat to one’s overall reputation/status even in secular society. (Not saying that’s totally gone away, but you wouldn’t think in Liza’s New York or at MIT it would be an issue!)

D: Hmmm, yeah, I can see that… Honestly, I’m kind of surprised Liza wanted the school to survive. I know she has sentimental attachment to it, but even before [spoiler] they knew she was queer [end spoiler], Poindexter (got to love that name) was absolutely heinous, from the patronizing way of talking to running the meetings when Liza was supposed to be running them.

A: Yes. Again, another way in which they seemed young for their age. By 17, you’d think she’d have more perspective. I can see a younger child being invested in the school that had been a second home, but most seventeen-year-olds I’ve known (including myself!) are a bit more jaded!

D: Very true. By 17 I had distrust for all authority, definitely including my school

I don’t know if you read my review and conversation about Well of Loneliness, but I saw a couple of comparisons between it and AOMM that surprised me […] Well, for one, both the protagonists were horrified at people hating them being gay, because they both felt that their love was the “best part” of themselves, or some variation on that. […]  Also, both have a scene with the couple being happy that is described as an “illusion”. It’s just funny because WoL is mentioned in AOMM as [spoiler] part of the teachers’ book collection [end spoiler].

Oh, and also, on an unrelated subject, I had to laugh at the note Liza found in her locker. “Lesie”? I wouldn’t even be sure what that was trying to refer to.

A: Yes, it was fun to see the lesbian classics appear on their shelves

D: Especially Patience & Sarah, because Liza and Annie read it, and this time I have, too!

A: I read once an essay that was talking about how generations of queer folks locate themselves in history through alternate means than family ties, since so many of them don’t come from families where the parents are themselves queer — and literature was one way.

Oh, I haven’t! Is it any good? Maybe we should read that next!

Re: Lesie, no, it took me a second. Dated slang. 🙂 A perennial bane of YA lit, I think

D: That’s exactly why I feel that queer lit is so important. It is a foundation to the queer community.

I liked it! It’s a little more cheery than you’d expect from historical lesbian lit. I’d definitely be up for reading it with you!

But I think we’ll have to wrap up this convo so I can catch my bus. Any last thoughts?

A: Not that I can think of — other than that I really enjoyed the chance to re-read this with someone else, and I’d totally be up for doing it again!

D: I would, too! Just let me know!

And that was our conversation about AOMM! I really like doing these discussions, because I love lesbian lit, but I don’t have many people I can talk to in real life about it. Anna and I want to make this a regular feature, probably once every two months or so. Next we’re reading Hello, Groin by Beth Goobie, so we can compare it to AOMM to see how lesbian teen lit had changed. If you’d like to read or re-read a lesbian book with me and discuss it like this, just email me and let me know! If you’d rather read our conversation without having to highlight for spoilers, Anna has it in full on her blog. Besides, you should be reading her blog anyway.

I’ll be posting my review of Annie On My Mind Wednesday.

Links of the week

Lambda Literary posted a whole bunch of authors reading from their work.

A Quebec LGBTQ Youth Centre put up a list of recommended reading.

Garbo Hates Hermeneutics has a post up about lesbian lit crit that, frankly, goes way over my head, but then again, I don’t know what “Garbo” or “Hermeneutics” are.

The Sealed Letter by Emma Donoghue was reviewed at A Book Blog of One’s Own.

Photographs of Claudia by KG MacGregor was reviewed at Read Any Good Gay and Lesbian Books Lately?

The Monkey’s Mask by Dorothy Porter was reviewed at a book a day till i can stay.

Affinity by Sarah Waters was reviewed at Mrs. O’dell Reads.

Lesbrary Sneak Peek: Jane Rule

I’m definitely behind in showing off my new les/etc books! Oh well, here are the stack of Jane Rule books I’ve acquired. I think I’ll address these all at once, because I’m excited for them as a whole more than as individual books.

Jane Rule is legendary in lesbian fiction. She wrote Desert of the Heart (still on my TBR shelves!), the classic lesbian book that was made into a movie. She was also Canadian–from BC, in particular–so that’s extra awesome in my opinion. She was an activist for free speech and gay rights. I think of her work as something I need to read as part of being a well-read lesbian.

Have you read any of Jane Rule’s books? What did you think of them?

Reviews and Articles Round Up

I’m Here. I’m Queer. What the Hell Do I Read? posted the teaser blurbs from Grl2Grl by Julie Anne Peters and Side Door by Jan Donley.

Ivan On the Road (Ivan Coyote’s blog) posted some great videos of her performances.

Loving Venus – Loving Mars has a post about some f/f books coming soon.

Readings in Lesbian & Bisexual Women’s Fiction has Readings with CL Hart and Readings with Joan Opyr.

Treasures From A Lesbian Library posted the cover and some pages from The Sound of One Fork, Ripening: An Almanac of Lesbian Lore & Vision Gay Oppression & Liberation and several others from “Guest Lezbrarian” Kelly Besser.

Mij Tanith, author of the e-book Three Seasons, was interviewed at Blaze.

Cheri Chrystal’s blog has an excerpt from her upcoming book, Wet and Wild.

Karen Kallmaker’s blog has an excerpt from her upcoming book Frosting On the Cake 2: Second Helpings.

The Straight State: Sexuality and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century America by Margot Canaday was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

The Song of the Sirens by Monica Conti was reviewed at Loving Venus – Loving Mars.

Inseparable: Desire Between Women In Literature by Emma Donoghue was reviewed at The Smart Set.

Making Things Perfectly Queer by Alexander Doty was reviewed at Buy Book Gay Lesbian.

Share and Share Some More by Leigh Ellwood were reviewed at Loving Venus – Loving Mars.

Black Blade Blues by J.A. Pitts was reviewed at Tor.com.

Sapphistries: A Global History of Love Between Women by Leila J. Rupp was reviewed at A Book Blog of One’s Own (another book blog I watch).

Empress of the World by Sara Ryan was reviewed at Things Mean A Lot (one of my favourite book blogs).

Affinity by Sarah Waters was reviewed at Picky Girl.

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters was reviewed at Iris on Books and this ain’t livin’. Care’s Online Bookclub collected some links to other reviews.

Written On the Body by Jeanette Winterson was reviewed at In the Next Room.

Guest Lesbrarian: Hannah

Ooh, another Guest Lesbrarian! We haven’t had one in a long time. If you want to have your review of a relevant book posted at the Lesbrary, just go to the About page for more info. This is a review from Hannah on Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café by Fannie Flagg.

Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café by Fannie Flagg is not my kind of book. There are no spaceships, serial killers, or wizards. It can be (and is) described as heartwarming and folksy, words that usually turn me off of a book faster than seeing Dan Brown’s name on the cover. That being said, Fried Green Tomatoes is a magnificent book and a personal favorite.

Many people are familiar with the movie adaptation starring Mary Stuart Masterson and Mary-Louise Parker (a very good if tragically de-gayed movie), and it’s a shame that the book isn’t more widely read. There are stories within stories here and all are as humorous and engaging as the last. The book follows two groups of people living in the same area in different eras. Evelyn Couch, an overweight and unhappy housewife, befriends an old woman, Ninny Threadgoode, in a nursing home and is inspired to take control her life. Mrs. Threadgoode tells Evelyn the story of the town of Whistle Stop, Alabama, which includes everything from true love to murder to the KKK.

In many cases where a novel is told in flashbacks, the present is used just as a vehicle for the main story, but that isn’t the case here. Evelyn and Mrs. Threadgoode are fully developed characters that the reader can truly identify and sympathize with. At no point does the reader feel like skipping over the sections of the book set in the late 80’s to get back to Ruth and Idgie in the 30’s.

The part of the aspect of the story most interesting to lesbian readers is the relationship between Ruth Jamison and Idgie Threadgoode, owners of the Whistle Stop Café. While the word lesbian is never used, it doesn’t take a genius to see that they are lovers in every sense of the word. Idgie loves Ruth (“Idgie smiled back at her and looked up into the clear blue sky that reflected in her eyes, and she was as happy as anybody who is in love in the summertime can be,”), Ruth loves Idgie (“When Idgie had grinned at her and tried to hand her that jar of honey, all these feelings that she had been trying to hold back came flooding through her, and it was at that second in time that she knew she loved Idgie with all her heart,”), and even Dot Weems, writer of the town’s weekly bulletin, knows Idgie and Ruth love each other (“Stump Threadgoode, son of Idgie Threadgoode and Ruth Jamison…”). There can be no doubt that these two are the genuine article.

Not only did this book make me laugh until I was nearly crying, but it also made me cry until I could barely stand to read another page. Very few books form such a strong emotional bond with the reader as quickly as Fried Green Tomatoes. Fannie Flagg is an incredibly gifted (and gay!) writer who has created a book that, while it doesn’t contain the wizards I’m so fond of, is not devoid of magic.

Thanks so much for the review, Hannah! Hannah also writes the Meriden Humane Society blog.

Have you read Fried Green Tomatoes At the Whistle Stop Cafe? What did you think of it?

Reviews and Articles Round Up

Lambda Literary has:

AfterEllen has an article on Lesbian Lit.

QueerType (everything you need to know in the queer publishing world) has extensive August queer publishing news and notes up.

Readings in Lesbian & Bisexual Women’s Fiction has Jeanine Hoffman talking about her novel, Strength In Numbers.

Kathy’s Lesbian Life Blog has an article called “After 20 years, Will Curve Magazine Survive?”

Our Big Gayborhood has an interview with Jaye Maiman.

A list of PoC (people of colour) GLBT books is up at Reading In Color.

A teaser (excerpt) from Landing by Emma Donoghue is at A Book Blog of One’s Own.

Excerpts from an Emma Donoghue interview (in full at The Stinging Fly) are posted at Writers and Writerisms.

An essay by Jeanette Winterson is posted at Shadows On Stone.

The Other Side of Paradise by Staceyann Chin was reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

Illusions of Love and Ecstasy by Cheril N. Clarke were reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

Making Things Perfectly Queer by Alexander Doty was reviewed at Buy Book Gay Lesbian.

Pulling Me Back by GStarr was reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

The Children of Mother Glory by C.M. Harris was reviewed at Read Any Good Gay and Lesbian Books Lately?.

M+O 4EVR by Tonya Hegamin was reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

Keep Your Wives Away From Them: Orthodox Women and Unorthodox Desires by Miryam Kabakov was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

All For Shayla by Ava McKnight was reviewed at Loving Venus – Loving Mars.

Dismantled by Jennifer McMahon was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

Tongue Love by Ebony Reese was reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

Deepest Desire by Anne Shade was reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

Strapped by Sharon D. Smith was reviewed at Sistahs on the Shelf.

The Devil Inside by Ali Vali was reviewed at Loving Venus – Loving Mars.

Lesbrary Review: Lovestruck by KT Grant

I’m a little divided on this one. This is one of the first romance books I’ve read, so I’m pretty new to the genre. I was also a little hesitant about the power difference between the two main characters (Barbara and Jenny). I don’t mind the age difference, but I wasn’t sure about the boss/employee dynamic, especially when Barbara laughs off Jenny’s accusation of sexual harassment.

I was surprised by how easy it was to read and how much I kept returning to it, though. I was reading it on the computer, and usually I have trouble keeping my attention on one thing when I do, but it managed to keep drawing me in.

I enjoyed their couple days together, when they stay at Barbara’s house. I liked the little bit of domesticity: the calmness and comfort of it amongst the swirl of drama in the rest of the book.

I also appreciated the side characters in Lovestruck, mostly Jenny’s coworkers and friends. They added some depth to the story.

I’m still not sure what to think about this one. I liked parts of it, but I’m not sure the genre or writing is my style and I still get stuck on the power dynamics. I’ll definitely have to keep exploring the romance genre to get some perspective.