Advance Praise for She's Not the Man I Married

Wow, Kate Bornstein liked it, too!

This is the first public voice of a new identity in the world, whose story includes and goes far beyond boy meets girl, boy meets boy, and girl meets girl. How stunning is that! The author’s courageous vulnerability makes her tale accessible, moving, and pee-in-your-pants funny. She pulls no punches, and she’s blessedly kind-spirited; which encouraged me, thrilled me, and scared the hell out of me.

— Kate Bornstein, author of Hello, Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws

Queer Awareness @ Columbia U.

Since October 11th is Coming Out Day, the whole of the month has become Queer Awareness Month, and as it turns out, Columbia University will be hosting a bunch of events – and I’ll be speaking on Monday, October 9th, as one of them.
You can always find my upcoming appearances on my author website, of course.

4th Preview of She's Not the Man I Married

Excerpt from Chapter 4 – Snips & Snails & Sugar & Spice:

Gender variant heterosexuals often are the people others gossip about, the ones that people mumble are just closet cases married to each other. Those slightly feminine older bachelors who everyone assumes are gay are probably at least occasionally crossdressers. Some of them are perhaps surprisingly het—as Betty and I both were to many people who knew us, including our families. But we exist. (I like to joke that Betty’s parents didn’t care so much that I was a liberal because they were so relieved I was a woman.) I would imagine not a few of us just learn how to get by; Betty hid her gender variance from a young age because of how huge the taboo against being a sissy is, and I was free to be a tomboy until puberty. We both got a slight break in the androgynous ’80s, and we’re both very thankful for that bit of cultural good timing. But once we were both in our twenties, we tried very hard to perform our respective gender roles properly. For Betty that meant pretty much avoiding relationships, and for me, it always felt like playing a part. My guess is that we have both now begun to acknowledge our gender variance because we have found a place to do so: the larger LGBT community. Since the T has been added, we have effectively been welcomed into the only subset of American culture that acknowledges gender variance. We are those mysterious “queer heterosexuals” that are starting to get mentioned in academic journals and LGBT papers.

Literary Menstrual Hut

This recent article by Michelle Tea in the SF Bay Guardian made me laugh, since I’m being published by Seal Press as well – and I can’t say the words “menstrual hut” ever crossed my mind.
But “literary” did. As did “trans friendly.” My experience with Seal so far has been stellar, to be honest, and I feel much as I did when I decided not to work for most straight male clients when I do my freelance bookkeeping (which I should write more about one of these days): it’s just such a pleasure to work with a bunch of kick-ass women.
Moreso, I just wanted to point out how hip Seal has been about publishing interesting trans books, like The Testosterone Files, Nobody Passes (edited by Mattilda), She’s Such a Geek (edited by Charlie Anders & her partner), Julia Serano‘s upcoming manifesto, and my book. In a nutshell, Seal’s trans titles are becoming a Who’s Who of the 30-something trans generation, no? And you’ll notice, too, that these feminists include both FTM and MTF narratives in their trans collection, just as they should.

Off to the Beach

Believe it or not, Betty and I are getting away to the beach for a few days before we head off to DO, to a little town on the coast of NJ known for its Victorian houses. I’ve never stayed in a B&B before, actually, so we’ll see. (People have told me they want you to mingle over breakfast. I do nothing like mingling at breakfast time. If they accept grumbling, I’ll be okay.)
We’ll round out the week on the campgrounds of DO and be back, refreshed with greenness.

World Party

Betty & I kicked off a week’s vacation – starting tonight or tomorrow, depending on your perspective – by seeing a band I first fell in love with sometime in 1986 or so called World Party. & They were great live; if you ever liked a song of theirs & they’re playing anywhere near you, do go.
We’re especially fond of them because one of their songs was the first song Betty ever sang to me, but no, I’m not telling which one, and yes, they did play it tonight.
Thanks, Karl, for many years of sanity delivered through music & lyrics.

Chile 1, U.S. 0

Chile has just made contraception for all women ages 14 and over free. Younger women do not need parental authorization to get contraception, either.
Irony: Chile is a Catholic country.
Fact: The president of Chile is a woman and a pediatrician.
Statement: A government spokesperson explained that because 14 of every 100 teenagers are sexually active that the government has a real need to provide these services.
Tragedy: Texas now requires any woman under the age of 18 to get parental permission for an abortion which has to also be notarized by a third party.