Yes, I Know This Is Futile

If there is one thing readers of my books tend to agree on it is that I do not talk down to them. There is a difference in experience levels between old and young, but that doesn't make old people geniuses or young people idiots. So lets do some more of that direct honesty thing.

Yesterday a person here on Goodreads decided that rather than actually read my books, she would call me a racist and an ableist. Did this hurt my feelings? Yeah, it did. It's false, obviously, but it still bothers me.

I've never made myself out to be some kind of role model. Without going into detail, I am not exactly impressed with big parts of my own backstory. I think I have a fair notion of who I am, my strengths and weaknesses. I'm an average prose writer with a world-class imagination and a surprisingly good ability do define character. My secret weapon as a writer is probably that I have excellent work habits and my battery never seems to run down.

On the down side I am arrogant, sometimes dismissive, and always impatient. I have great big, gaping holes in my education - I'm a high school drop-out. In the part of my brain where math should be I have an empty space where I store old episodes of The Simpsons. I have the math skills of a fern. I have ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder) and borderline ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder) and more than a touch of OCD. There's a lot wrong with me, a lot of baggage I'm carrying, a nice big load of guilt, an intimidating awareness of my own capacity to do stupid, impetuous things, and a long list of failures and fuck-ups.

There is in short plenty wrong with me. But racism or ableism or any form of bigotry? No. Categorically, no.

People who actually read my books are likely to be baffled by accusations alleging that I am this or that sort of 'ist.' I've authored or co-authored something like 150 books, including ANIMORPHS, GONE, BZRK, MAGNIFICENT 12, MESSENGER OF FEAR and FRONT LINES. People who read my actual books come away if anything with a sense that I evangelize constantly for diversity, inclusion and tolerance. One might, for example, wonder why if I'm this or that 'ist' I would place an interracial romance at the heart of ANIMORPHS, or why I would carefully nurture Edilio in GONE from despised undocumented outsider to become the most respected person in the FAYZ. Or why I would shoehorn Tulsa in 1921 into FRONT LINES. I could go on and on, but again, the people who actually read my books are not the people attacking me.

People who actually read my books understand perfectly well where I stand on race, gender, religion, etc... They might well accuse me of using too many short sentences, or not exactly knowing how to punctuate, or writing overly-long books, but the people who actually read my books are almost never the ones accusing me.

So, why would people who don't read my books decide to attack me on the most absurdly dishonest grounds possible? Politics. No, really: politics. I am a political guy at least as much as I am a literary type, and in that capacity I have challenged the concepts of 'cultural appropriation,' I've said that 'name-and-shame' is too often a self-defeating tactic that can only hurt allies, and I've criticized efforts to ban books from the Left, just as I oppose such efforts when they come from the Right. Yes, that's what this is all about: a fight over tactics.

I am a man of the Left. I've been a financial donor for Democrats since I reached the point of having money to give. I was for gay marriage literally decades before it was even on the political radar. I have despised racism since as a child I saw 'whites only' drinking fountains at a drive-in movie in the panhandle of Florida. My family was threatened by the KKK at one point because my mother was tutoring kids from the segregated high school. I take these slanders seriously because I take racism seriously. It's not something to joke about or toss off lightly. Racism isn't just wrong or impolite, it's evil. Six million members of my particular tribe went up Nazi chimneys because of racism.

I am a liberal, but I strive to be honest in my politics. I don't fight for a team, I try to fight for principles: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, a free press, equality under the law. So when 'my side' goes in directions I think violate those core principles, and employs tactics I think are unfair, politically stupid and self-destructive, I speak out.

When I speak out, do I know I'll be attacked? Of course. It's quite deliberate. My thinking is that I am in effect the right 'size' to speak out. See, if someone as famous as, say, Suzanne Collins, speaks out it becomes a headline. If someone smaller speaks out they risk their careers, and they'll be ignored anyway. I am not 'big' enough to make headlines, but big enough that people in the publishing world will pay attention, and at 62 I'm not as worried about my career.

What's fascinating and a bit of a lesson in politics is this: the people attacking me have the same exact stated goals that I have. In other words, we both want diversity in kidlit at the level of characters, at the level of writers and at the level of publishing. Yes: we are on the same side. Proof? Well, again, try actually reading my books, there are about 30,000 pages of proof. And that is a big part of the problem because each new generation discovers old issues and imagines that they are the first on the scene, and no one wants some bald old fart to already be there, hanging around and smoking a cigar. Well, sorry kids, but this bald old fart was already on the scene. I didn't need to be 'made aware,' I was aware before most of the people telling me I need to be aware were born.

I have no control over publishing, and I can't change my skin color, so I can't do anything about those two areas of diversity, but I can make a difference at the level of characters. In fact: I have. In fact: no other single kidlit writer has done more. But I am old, an old white guy, born back before we had seat-belts, let alone the internet. Old. Therefore I am assumed-to-be-out-of-touch and quite possibly senile and certainly incapable of the sort of perfect enlightenment that comes only to the very most sensitive of folks. So I couldn't possibly have anything useful to contribute to a conversation on diversity. The mere fact that I've spent 6 million words promoting diversity is apparently not something to be celebrated, it's something to despise because I didn't wait for everyone else, I just went ahead and did it on my own.

My essential crime is that I went ahead and did the assignment at the end of the textbook and did not wait for the teacher or the rest of the class. Sorry. I will try in future not to get the answer before the other kids.

There is a bit of an industry growing up around diversity in books. There's money to be made, publishing deals to be struck, positions to be enhanced. A sort of self-appointed priesthood is forming to act as intercessors, guides, scolds, judges, juries and Twitter executioners. And then I come along and basically tell them all to fuck off because I was doing it all on my own and long before the high priests came along. I can see where that would irritate the priesthood. And honestly, if the priesthood was not actually harming the very cause we both support, I would just roll my eyes and think, 'OK, whatever: yes you are totally the first people to discover diversity, good for you.' Like when college freshmen all suddenly discover the existence of hypocrisy and then won't shut up about it, as if every single generation of freshmen since the Paleolithic Era hadn't discovered the exact same thing. But the priesthood is in my opinion harming the cause of diversity. They are harming the cause of free speech. They are weakening our moral arguments and leaving us vulnerable to counterattack.

Did you know publishers now use 'sensitivity readers?' They get paid a couple hundred bucks to read a manuscript and point out areas where sensitivities might be rubbed raw. There are African-American sensitivity readers and Latino and gay and trans and Muslim sensitivity readers.

So, question: when some alt-right white group demands to have a sensitivity read, what do we say? No? No only to white people? How is that going to work? What core principle will we appeal to? What do you do when Bill O'Reilly makes an issue of it and some hapless kidlit editor is left sputtering weak excuses on-air? What do you do if Scientologists demand equal treatment and insist on sensitivity reads? Why don't Mormons get a read? Or the Irish for that matter?

Obviously we can marshal arguments about historic (and current) inequities, a long history of blatant racism in publishing, the shameful scarcity of authors of color, the institutional racism that blocks so many young PoC from even getting close to publishing, and so on, but will those arguments be convincing in a country where 46% of people voted for Trump? No. Those arguments look like special pleading. The only argument we can advance to rationalize one sensitivity read as opposed to another, is historical unfairness, to which the counter is that current unfairness does not cure historical unfairness, and that we have no rational basis for deciding that any given group is or is not entitled to have its sensitivities considered.

In the end it would look not like a fight for principle, but a fight for 'our' side. It drags kidlit into partisan political warfare, defining kidlit as not just liberal (which it always has been) but as a part of the far left, out of touch and defending ideas which do not hold up to scrutiny. Placing kidlit on the far left is in my opinion, short-sighted, self-defeating and stupid. It harms the cause of diversity. So I said those things.

And, that's why I am the bad, bad old man of kidlit. Is that why this particular woman here on Goodreads decided to call me a racist and an ableist? Nah. She just read the lies and distortions, the deliberate mis-characterizations others have written, and she bought into those lies. Rather than actually read some portion of what I've actually written, she leapt to the assumption that any random slander she saw on the internet must be true. There's an old saying, "A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes." People love to assume the worst about other people, so despite a massive pile of evidence that I'm actually a fairly decent dude quite obviously committed to diversity, the lie is instantly believed and therefore I am a racist, an ableist, and assumed to be guilty of every other ism as well.

I am a perfect target. I made myself the target precisely because I remain committed to diversity in kidlit, as I have been since the early 90's when I first got to the point of inventing my own characters. The proof of who I am, what I believe, what I stand for is to be found in 150 books, 30,000 pages, something like 6 million words. But I differ from some other advocates of diversity on certain strategies and tactics, and therefore my life's work is dismissed as meaningless and I am called the worst thing I know to call anyone.

I can predict the priesthood's responses. They'll drag out their usual array of dialog-obliterating insults and labels. 'Fragile white person syndrome,' no doubt, as if being accused of the worst thing short of pedophilia or murder is something I should just shrug off. Or I'll get the 'white savior complex' dialog-killer. Scorn will be heaped. Memes will be deployed. Or, as one of these people did not long ago, they'll cherry-pick and distort: did you know that I called Edilio a 'wetback?' and therefore obviously hate Latinos? Say what? You think that was a character not me, and the attitude was clearly treated as wrong, and it was all a necessary part of slowly growing the character of Edilio, revealing his strength and therefore making the point that it would be contemptible to look down on undocumented people? Well, sure, you know that, because you read my books. The people attacking me do not.

And yet, despite everything I have put in books over the course of a 27 year career, and despite what I wrote above, you, reader, will nevertheless walk away carrying a shadow of doubt. That's why I titled this post, "Yes, I Know It's Futile." Once accused, however wrongly, you are never innocent.
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Published on January 12, 2017 10:58
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message 1: by Katelynn (new)

Katelynn I work at a bookstore and whenever kids or parents come in looking for recommendations, I head straight to your (and your wife's) books, and I always make sure to tell them how incredibly diverse your cast of characters are and what positive, empowering messages you've crafted inside your stories. Front Lines in particular - I, as a 30-year-old woman, don't need to be mansplained about what sexism is, and I would normally bristle at the idea of a man taking on that issue to write about, and yet you nailed it. Sure, you're a white man from an older generation, but you have empathy and you have a voice and you use both for good. Anyone who thinks differently hasn't, as you've said, read your books.

(Also, Edilio is a masterpiece!!!!)


Harisa- EsquiredToRead Edilio is a masterpiece, that is correct. I am not sure what this is regarding, but you're right, everyone that reads your book would never call you a racist. Keep doing what you're doing...you are one of my favorite authors consistently through my teen years to my adult.


message 3: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie Thank you for all you are doing and standing for - it's not necessarily the easy path, but since when is the going ever easy when something is worth fighting for and working towards? You (and your wife) have influenced so many children the world over, whether the kids realized it or not, in such a positive way with the diversity and acceptance and heart which you have infused into your many books. I should know - I'm one of those now grown-up kids.


message 4: by Dallen (new)

Dallen Malna The accusation of racism means nothing now...Not that there aren't actual racists in the world but people have cried wolf too hard and too often. Don't worry about what a few looneys say. Let your work stand for itself :)


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael Katelynn wrote: "I work at a bookstore and whenever kids or parents come in looking for recommendations, I head straight to your (and your wife's) books, and I always make sure to tell them how incredibly diverse y..."

I had a lot of practice. I think it's still true that I've written more books as a woman author (with Katherine, or under a pseudonym) than as a man. It's basically not much different than creating a character - you have to step inside someone else's head and try to figure out how the world looks to them, how language sounds to them, etc...

Of course my prime exposure to women is Katherine. Quick KA Applegate story. So, we are broke and desperate in Ocean City, Maryland. We literally get picked up hitchiking because we couldn't afford 60 cents for the bus, and it's some old Italian guy who wants us to be night managers at his seedy boardwalk hotel. A few weeks in the guy tries to get us to move into his room with him. We argue, it gets heated, Katherine says something, and the guy says, "I don't talk to no woman."

Well.

The future Newbery winner says, and I quote, "You'll talk to this woman, mother--ker." Sure, about three minutes later we were out on our asses with nowhere to live, but totally worth it. I did not have to be taught about feminist women who stand up for themselves, I was living the master class.


message 6: by Michael (new)

Michael Harisa wrote: "Edilio is a masterpiece, that is correct. I am not sure what this is regarding, but you're right, everyone that reads your book would never call you a racist. Keep doing what you're doing...you are..."

Thanks, that is more than kind of you.


message 7: by Michael (new)

Michael Stephanie wrote: "Thank you for all you are doing and standing for - it's not necessarily the easy path, but since when is the going ever easy when something is worth fighting for and working towards? You (and your ..."

We have been humbled actually by the response of former readers now grown up. Honestly, we mostly were just trying to pay the rent and have some fun (while sneaking in lessons on philosophy and ethics and history.) It was kind of overwhelming to start seeing 'our kids' become accomplished adults. Now if we could only do that with our actual kids.


message 8: by Michael (new)

Michael David wrote: "The accusation of racism means nothing now...Not that there aren't actual racists in the world but people have cried wolf too hard and too often. Don't worry about what a few looneys say. Let your ..."

That's a part of the problem. If everyone is a racist then effectively no one is. We end up depriving ourselves of the ability to speak the truth. And particularly now, when the KKK and the American Nazi Party, and Vladimir Putin are all celebrating, we need to be able to speak the truth and have it mean something. Instead, because of chronic overuse and misuse, one of our weapons no longer reaches the enemy and only drops shells on our friends and allies.


message 9: by Katelynn (new)

Katelynn Michael wrote: "Katelynn wrote: "I work at a bookstore and whenever kids or parents come in looking for recommendations, I head straight to your (and your wife's) books, and I always make sure to tell them how inc..."

That is the most Rachel thing I've ever heard!!! What a badass story! Thank you for sharing it - now I adore her even more.

It's basically not much different than creating a character - you have to step inside someone else's head and try to figure out how the world looks to them, how language sounds to them, etc...

Well, yes, that's exactly it! What I find so many writers do wrong (especially male writers, but women are guilty of it too) is that they think in order to make a female character strong, they have to make them masculine! They essentially just write a male character and give them a killer body and some sassy dialogue and remove all femininity and boom, a strong female character. What I love about your characters and Katherine's characters are that they just are who they are! Male or female, black or white or Latino, they are human beings with childhoods, coping mechanisms, braveries and weaknesses. It's wonderful, and so important.

There's so much BS in the world right now and we need to be banding together instead of attacking each other. Thanks for doing what you do and inspiring others to use their voices for good too.


message 10: by Elias (last edited Jan 12, 2017 03:04PM) (new)

Elias I love your books, Mr. Grant, and you're a fantastic guy as well: we met when PLAGUE came out; I doubt you'll remember me, though. Please don't let the SJWs/regressive left get you down (do not confuse them for activists-- I fight for social justice, as a member of Black Lives Matter and NOMAS, but am a liberal activist, not a social justice warrior-- and yes, I hate that term as it sounds way too cool). They're a threat to true liberalism everywhere. I wholeheartedly agree with you about the horrible "name-and-shame" mentality, the ridiculous overstatement that is "cultutral appropriation" and that book-banning from all sides, including that of The Continent, is barbaric.

Like you, I am as liberal as can be. The SJWs are not liberals, even if their basic ideologies are similar. Liberalism is about acceptance and love, not about hostility, oppression and shame. The methods and tactics of the SJW far more resemble that of the conservative. They have the same no-second-chances, us-versus-them mentality, the same black-and-white worldview, the same witch-hunting techniques and the same holier-than-thou, Dalek-like delusions of purity. They attack liberals more than conservatives anyway-- they look away as Trump spreads his evil ideology like a sick man spreads a plague and then go and try to persuade Jennifer Lawrence and Tilda Swinton to kill themselves. They help give the alt-right (again, I despise that term-- they're neo-Nazis and I will call them as such) the power they hold. Look, you wrote GONE, one of the most diverse books I've read. I don't know anyone who's read it and didn't see themselves in one of the characters. The fact that the man who gave us Edilio Escoabar, a beloved role model for millions, is now a target of the SJW horde shows that our society is crumbling with increasing polarization. You're not "problematic", Mr. Grant, they are.

Also, if you're ever under attack from the angry mob, just realize that you stand in the company of other awesome people like Jennifer Lawrence, Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston. Thank you so much for all the wonderful books you've given us, and thank you for that powerful essay. It literally moved me to tears.

Your loyal fan,
Elias


message 11: by Michael (new)

Michael Elias wrote: "I love your books, Mr. Grant, and you're a fantastic guy as well: we met when PLAGUE came out; I doubt you'll remember me, though. Please don't let the SJWs/regressive left get you down (do not con..."

Hi, Elias. I think Black Lives Matter is an example of a very smart activist organization. The action plan they published made a whole lot of very practical sense. It connected the dots.

I have a feeling about Deray McKesson that he might be an important guy. I contributed a bit to his mayoral race - he was never going to win, but he got his feet wet in electoral politics which is good training. It's hard to judge whether he'll rise further, like picking some college kid to win a Nobel, but he has the smarts and the skills and if he keeps hammering away and gets a bit of luck along the way. . . I could see a Senator McK.


message 12: by Michael (new)

Michael Elias wrote: "I love your books, Mr. Grant, and you're a fantastic guy as well: we met when PLAGUE came out; I doubt you'll remember me, though. Please don't let the SJWs/regressive left get you down (do not con..."

And you're right, 'alt-right' is to Nazi what 'businessman' is to a mafia capo.


message 13: by Derek Peter (new)

Derek Peter Hawley There's a sort of dark humor to the whole thing IMO. (A nearly Grantian humor, perhaps?) Because of your age and skin color, some people see you as "the enemy" to the cause of not being judged for one's age, skin color, etc.

One of the writers you've inspired will probably have a character named Grant Michaels who struggles with the exact same problem somewhere in the book. So even though you can't beat the Internetocracy, literature will vindicate you.


message 14: by Michael (new)

Michael Derek wrote: "There's a sort of dark humor to the whole thing IMO. (A nearly Grantian humor, perhaps?) Because of your age and skin color, some people see you as "the enemy" to the cause of not being judged for ..."

I tell people that in almost every case you have a choice between seeing something as tragedy or as comedy, and if there's any way to choose comedy you'd be a fool not to. Which is some wise stuff. That's some Gandalf stuff right there. Of course this doesn't mean I listen to my own advice. I'd have had a very different life if I actually listened to all the wise bullshit I lay on other people.


message 15: by Angela (new)

Angela C So very, very well said. Thank you for writing this post!


message 16: by Tina (new)

Tina Can I just say that I thought it was impossible to like you more, but I guess I was wrong. Even though, I'm not even close to have read all your 150 books, I doubt you will ever not be my favourite author. I first read the Gone series, and I must say I was immediately dragged into this complex universe and the many diversed characters. I was litterally amazed and I couldn't stop reading. Now I'm reading Front Lines and after that I can't wait to read BZRK.

Even though this post is so well written and have so many good points, it still annoys me that people would actually go ahead and call you something like that. Especially when they haven't read any of your books. But I guess it's just easier to 'go with the flow', than doing some researching, right?


message 17: by Varuthiin (last edited Apr 06, 2017 12:31PM) (new)

Varuthiin I've read the first five books of Gone (and now reading them again to catch up to Light and prepare for Monster)
.....and I don't remember anything racist about them other than one joking comment from Quinn to Edilio in book 1.
And if I remember correctly, Edilio sticks up for himself, and later of course "becomes the most respected person in the FAYZ", which is true.
Racism happens. All Micheal Grant did was prove that it doesn't stop people from living.
(Not saying I approve of racism)


message 18: by Elias (new)

Elias Book Geek wrote: "I've read the first five books of Gone (and now reading them again to catch up to Light and prepare for Monster)
.....and I don't remember anything racist about them other than one joking comment f..."


Quinn is racist, GONE is not.


message 19: by Elias (new)

Elias You were right about futility. The other day I got into a public shouting match with someone I just met who said she was boycotting your books because you're "Problematic". It's the Scarlet Letter.


message 20: by Michael (new)

Michael Elias wrote: "You were right about futility. The other day I got into a public shouting match with someone I just met who said she was boycotting your books because you're "Problematic". It's the Scarlet Letter."

Oh, dude, sorry to hear you caught some grief, but proud that you would take a stand.


message 21: by Jeremy (new)

Jeremy Szal Bravo, Mr. Grant. Bravo. I'm non-white (and non-USian) and I despise it when these people, looking for an excuse to unload their toxic, damaging bile, try to speak for all minorities by way of taking the slightest out of context quote and utilizing it as a weapon. These people aren't interested in bettering anyone. They have no hesitation about slandering and sending their screeching mob to tear people down at the slightest provocation, and I hate it because it makes people so antagonistic towards being better and learning and understanding, which we all should. And anyone who defends themselves, regardless of accusation is "part of the problem". It's tribalism, pure and simple. Same goes for when you were accused of "erasure" by someone who I won't do the honour of naming.

I grew up reading your novels, and they inspired me to write my own one day. So thank you for that, and don't let the morons get you down. They're just sad bullies looking for an easy target.

You keep on.


message 22: by Michael (new)

Michael Jeremy wrote: "Bravo, Mr. Grant. Bravo. I'm non-white (and non-USian) and I despise it when these people, looking for an excuse to unload their toxic, damaging bile, try to speak for all minorities by way of taki..."

Thanks for that. Much appreciated.


message 23: by Ayesha (new)

Ayesha {Heir of Bookdom} Calling you a racist and ableist is very unfair, especially considering how you have such diverse characters, both racially and personality vise.

But i have to ask: whatever happened to Mohammad from the Gone series? I always wondered how he ended up, and would he be considered one of the heroes, or at least counted as one of the good guys?


message 24: by Elias (new)

Elias Jeremy wrote: "Bravo, Mr. Grant. Bravo. I'm non-white (and non-USian) and I despise it when these people, looking for an excuse to unload their toxic, damaging bile, try to speak for all minorities by way of taki..."

You are amazing.


message 25: by kerrycat (new)

kerrycat You know I adore your stories and the terrifying nightmares I continue to have as a result of my love for them - as well as my ongoing respect for my clothes dryer every weekend as I load my wet laundry into it. My religious and political beliefs differ from yours but I absolutely respect your opinions, your talent, and your work ethic and would never attack you personally because of those differences. You have always been a man of integrity, and I am happy, as a librarian working with youth, to recommend your stories to those I think would enjoy them both for entertainment as well as for their provoking nature, which will make them think about the characters and stories long after they have finished reading them.

Thank you for continuing to give us spectacular fiction that all ages will enjoy and fear (at 48, I am long past your target readership, but I'm not going anywhere!).


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