Monthly Archives: February 2024

Undead Sexist Cliche: If a woman didn’t enjoy sex, that’s hi-larious!

When Harry Met Sally is a charming rom-com about Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan staying friends for years before finally realizing they’re in love. It’s probably best known for the memorable fake orgasm scene. Harry (Crystal) assures Sally (Ryan) that the women he sleeps with are sexually satisfied — he’s heard them give orgasmic moans. She proves him wrong by giving out a spectacular fake-orgasmic moan that stuns everyone in the restaurant.

This is meant to be embarrassing for Harry. What goes unsaid is that lots of women had a disappointing time sleeping with him. Becauseas Lili Loofbourow puts it “we live in a culture that sees female pain as normal and male pleasure as a right … Women have spent decades politely ignoring their own discomfort and pain to give men maximal pleasure.”

Kissing cousin to the idea women don’t like sex is the idea it doesn’t matter whether they like sex. According to DC McAllister and Dennis Prager, among others, women should just lie on their back and think of England. If their husband wants sex, where do they get off thinking they should be “in the mood”? No wonder some women don’t enjoy sex if that’s what it’s like for them. As Roy Edroso points out, if the husband’s too tired to give her what she wants, McAllister’s view is too bad, so sad — you can’t expect him to put you first!

And from that it’s a short jump to arguing that women shouldn’t enjoy sex or at least not when it’s free of the risk of pregnancy. Part of the Heritage Foundation’s theocratic plan for 2025 is “returning the consequentiality to sex. … restoring sex to its true purpose, & ending recreational sex & senseless use of birth control pills.” Because in the eyes of the right, only nymphomaniac sluts use birth control. Which is to say any claims you may have heard that conservatives don’t want to outlaw birth control are lies (forced-birthers lie a lot). And despite their claims that it’s about birth control being abortion (it isn’t) if they’re opposed to recreational sex that’s not the issue: any birth control  method would be wrong. The Catholic group Human Life Internationl, for example, argues that consensual recreational sex is rape (it isn’t).

In short, the issue isn’t the lives of fetuses. If recreational sex is bad, then any method of preventing conception is bad. “Save the babies” used to be the excuse but they aren’t hiding their true views as much any more.

For the record I doubt most of them have problems with men having recreational sex and no consequentiality. It will always be women who wear the scarlet letter; the man who cheats or doesn’t gift his virginity to his bridge — hey, boys will be boys! It’s not a double standard, men are just different (spoiler: it’s totally a double standard).

As Fred Clark says, a lot of right-wingers are horrified that under liberalism and freedom of religion “the state is neutral toward questions of “the good,” leaving that up to its citizens to work out for themselves.” Yes, how horrible that would be — individuals deciding for themselves what constitutes a good moral life, how they relate to God (or don’t), deciding on their own worldview. Sooooo much better if someone like the Heritage Foundation gets to impose their view of the good life. If anyone else tries, of course, well that’s what heresy trials and concentration camps are for.

As Clark has pointed out, the liberal bogeyman doesn’t “prevent you from seeking and finding your own answer to that question. Nor does it interfere with you embracing, living, promoting, or sharing that answer. You are free to pursue that answer in your own life and you are free to persuade your fellow citizens of the truth, beauty, or goodness of that answer.”” But that’s not enough. People might have an answer the Heritage Foundation and many others on the right don’t like. You know, one where women are equal citizens and not means to an end.

Of course, as Clark says, “ven on the very slim chance the government somehow initially got the answer mostly “right,” the establishment of that “right” answer would change it, alter it, and deform it. This bastardized, twisted version of that “right” answer would become the official answer, and any other answer — including the “right” one in its untwisted form — would be precluded.” And if we get the theocracy so many on the right seem to yearn for, all alternatives will be precluded, as brutally as necessary.

Damn, for a post that started with a light rom-com, things got grim fast. For more examples of odious misogynist arguments and why they’re bullshit, check out my Undead Sexist Cliches, available as a Amazon paperback, an ebook and from several other retailers. Cover by Kemp Ward.

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Fear of vaccinated lettuce and other science links

Tennessee State Rep. Scott Cepicky wants labels in supermarkets to warn us against vaccinated lettuce.

It’s a lot less funny that Ron DeSantis’ handpicked surgeon general is discouraging quarantine and vaccines in a measles outbreak. As Sherlock Holmes once put it, when a doctor goes bad he’s the worst of villains.

DeSantis himself now claims boosters increase the chance of Covid.

Andrew Wakefield, discredited anti-vax doctor, opposes the mumps vaccine too.

An NYC midwife has been fined $300,000 for taking payoffs to fake immunization remedies.

But let’s not forget how much Trump contributed to right-wing anti-vax sentiment

Don’t think anti-vax is just about bad ideas or loyalty to Trump: there’s big money in it: “Children’s Health Defense paid Kennedy, then chairman and chief legal counsel and now an independent candidate for president, more than $510,000 in 2022, double his 2019 salary, tax records show. Informed Consent Action Network paid Executive Director Del Bigtree $284,000 in 2022, a 22% increase from 2019. Bigtree now works as communications director for Kennedy’s presidential campaign.”

For more medical misdeeds, consider the WaPo’s report on how the NFL set standards for concussion damage that saved it millions in payouts to players.

And it seems there may be skullduggery in the organ-transplant sector.

Archeologists claim an Indonesian temple is a record-setting 25,000 years old — but other archeologists say the evidence is thin.

New light on the genetics and history of the earliest human beings.

Why are colon cancer rates rising among young Americans?

DNA tests on Beethoven’s hair show he wasn’t black, had hepatitis and didn’t suffer from lead poisoning. Plus some of the hair wasn’t really his.

Improved HVAC in schools could make millions of students healthier. States have the money to do it but they aren’t spending it.

“It would perhaps be too cynical to say that [AI} existential risk rhetoric has become a cynical hustle, intended to redirect the attentions of regulators toward possibly imaginary future risks in the future, and away from problematic but profitable activities that are happening right now.”

Watching someone act in a slow-motion film makes it easier to believe their actions are intentional.

“The Times’s lawsuit, however, includes multiple examples of OpenAI’s GPT-4 AI model outputting New York Times articles word for word.” — a look at a New York Times lawsuit against AI scraping the newspaper’s stories.

The legend of Washington DC’s dinosaur fossil, capitalsaurus!

Native American artifacts and bodies are going back to the tribes. Though from the details, it’s going to be complicated.

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Who doesn’t want a war where rocs fight spaceships?

If you think that sounds silly, please ignore the following cover by Robert Gibson Jones.And here’s another Jones cover with an unusual flying steed.
To balance that, here’s one of those weird anthology covers from the 1960s, courtesy of Robert Foster.
And here’s a contemporary book cover by Barye Phillips. From all the crying on the cover, I’m guessing that being “girls on the make” doesn’t work out well for them.
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It’s the greatest evil show on Earth!

A couple of years back, I wrote about how many political reporters find treating politics as sport more entertaining than tackling it as serious business. Handicapping the race —how does Trump saying there should be penalties for mothers who get abortions affect his standing in the polls? — is more fun than looking at how ugly that would be. And Trump saying outrageous shit like how Americans captured British airports during the War of Independence is a laugh-a-minute, right? Much better to focus on how silly he is than bring up whether he’s slipping into dementia — sure, Biden’s age is very, very important but who cares Trump is only four years younger and a gibbering idiot who treats NATO like a protection racket. As Shakezula says, every article about how very, very old Biden is reflects a bad choice.

Standard arguments from the media are that voters aren’t as concerned about Trump’s age whereas Biden’s age worries them. Given there’s been more coverage of Biden’s age, that’s not surprising. As Paul Krugman says, it’s overshadowing that Biden has solid accomplishments in four years: pulling out of Iraq, boosting American manufacturing, a stronger labor board, expanding Obamacare, defending abortion rights. The press, however, have picked Biden’s age as the issue and they’re running with it. Maybe because it’s the easiest thing to criticize Biden on so they can pretend they’re even handed and unbiased. Trump says he should be immune from prosecution if he kills his political rivals, Biden’s four years older — see, both sides are flawed!

Thus right-wing pundit Ross Douthat can admit Biden’s doing a good job, sort-of, but the perception of age might affect the race. And maybe it would give our enemies hope we’re too weak to stop their evil schemes (for a country with as much military power as we have and as much willingness to use it, we’re astonishingly nervous about looking weak). The solution: Biden wins the primaries, drops out at the nominating convention and lets the party pick the next president.

It’s hard to see how this makes sense as a strategy — I know, it’s Douthat, he never makes sense, but still. This involves an old-school horse-trading convention where delegates and party power-brokers settle on the nominee — but how many voters who picked Biden are going to feel good about this (Douthat is emphatic Biden shouldn’t handpick the next candidate)? Why assume this will turn up “Johnny Unbeatable,” the one candidate who’s clearly capable of taking Trump down? Why assume Douthat, who thinks the right wing isn’t reactionary enough, is offering a strategy he thinks will help Dems? As LGM points out there’s no way this works out well.

However this strategy does appeal to people in the media, at least: Ezra Klein (for whom I have way more respect than I do Ross Douthat) thinks it’s a good idea — and it would give the media so much excitement and conflict to cover (“hey’re going to be sitting for a million interviews and podcasts — very busy time on “The Ezra Klein Show.”). Coupled with the impulse to treat right-wing bullshit as if it was sincere and serious, it results in some of the press putting their thumb on the scale on Trump’s side, whether they’re intending to or not. Case in point.

The thumb had a fatal impact in 2016 with the media’s endless covering of Clinton’s emails and non-scandals. It could happen again. But then again, we’ve seen what Trump is capable of. The forced-birth movement reminds us every day how much worse they have in mind for America’s women. I’m hopeful the public, outside the hard-core MAGA people, are past being fooled.

We’ll know in a few months. Until then I’ll keep arguing, keep donating, keep writing GOTV postcards.

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Movies, Justice and the Confederate Flag: Books

As a Valentine’s Day gift, TYG got me Leonard Maltin’s 151 BEST MOVIES YOU’VE NEVER SEEN, though unsurprisingly I’ve seen around 23 of them (which is a compliment to Maltin’s curating — other Obscure Movie Lists do much worse at surprising me). I’ve been a fan of Maltin’s for years and I find him a reliable judge even if we’re not 100 percent in sync (he liked Zathura much more than I did) so I anticipating making much use of this guide and already have (Disney’s Teacher’s Pet yesterday came from this book). A mix of foreign films, old films, indie work and some that just fell through the cracks (distributor folded, studio did a crap job marketing the movie, etc.) this was interesting to read, including his thoughts on modern audiences based on reactions in his film classes (more cynical, less comfortable with sincere no-irony stuff).  Thanks, TYG! Below, the poster for Millions, one of the 151 I’ve seen (and loved).When I read Survivor Injustice I was skeptical of author Kylie Cheung’s argument that institutions should handle more sex-crime cases in-house, rather than through the court system. A book she mentioned on the subject, SEXUAL JUSTICE: Supporting Victims, Ensuring Due Process and Resisting the Conservative Backlash by Alexandra Brodsky makes a better case for that than I would have thought.

Brodsky admits that schools, businesses and other organizations are often dreadful at dealing with harassment or sexual assault cases. However, she argues, the odds of changing them are better than reforming the legal system and they can offer a wider range of solutions. A school, for example, can shift class schedules, allow the victim to make up missed tests and move the survivor to a different dorm. If the victim doesn’t want jail time for the offender, she can get what she needs without him being locked up.

That’s a sticking point for many people: how can you penalize the rapist/harasser if there’s no trial? Where is the due process? Brodsky (while noting that sometimes this argument is just a fig leaf for rape apologists) argues that while due process for both parties is important, that doesn’t translate into a full trial with corresponding legal requirements. Nobody suggests that the college can’t take any disciplinary actions without a full court case — it’s only sexual cases where that suddenly becomes an issue. The accused should be notified of the proceeding in advance and they should be treated fairly; it doesn’t follow they need the right to cross-examine the victim they allegedly assaulted face-to-face (one of the innovations Betsy DeVos introduced as Trump’s Secretary of Education). Overall this was an excellent work.

WHEN SHOULD LAW FORGIVE? by Martha Minow tackles the question both Brodsky and Cheung touch upon, the possibility of restorative justice or similar tribunals and the merits and flaws in, say, having the victim forgive once the accused confesses. Unlike Cheung, who wants to defund the prison-industrial complex, Minow doesn’t see forgiveness as exempting anyone from legal consequences (the Charleston church survivors forgave Dylan Root but they didn’t call for him to get out of jail free) and points out that when forgiveness becomes part of an official proceeding it can pressure the victims to offer forgiveness, even when they don’t feel it. This isn’t definitive on the topic but it’s certainly thought provoking.

Now a pause for another film Maltin and I both like — — and now today’s final review, for THE CONFEDERATE BATTLE FLAG: America’s Most Embattled Emblem by John M. Coski. The author starts by explaining the flag everyone flies is specifically a battle flag used by troops in the field, not the Stars and Bars and how the battle flag came to be identified as the CSA symbol. Which had the ironic side effect that the Stars and Bars has been an acceptable compromise in some disputes because nobody was waving it after Brown v. Board of Education.Coski shows how along with its racist baggage, the flag has also been shorthand for the South (particularly in advertising), rebellion, American fighting spirit (as in “Rebel” Ralston, the Southern member of Marvel’s Howling Commandos), and in Europe simply an iconic image like Coca Cola and the Stars and Stripes. Coski covers several oddball twists in the saga such as neo-confederates protesting flag displays (waving it at football games disrespects an American icon!)and concludes that while the flag certainly has been waved for racist reasons, it’s not fair to assume that’s always the case (“Remember that the KKK also marched with the Stars and Stripes.”). Dry and very detailed, but good.

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Valentine’s Day and some mad science: movies and TV

As I mentioned back in December, Love, Actually is a terrific movie. Garry Marshall’s VALENTINE’S DAY (2010) has the same set-up — large cast, romantic story arcs, characters are all interwoven and connected — but while watchable it lacks the magic of the earlier movie (which I’m sure was an influence). Impressively cast, though, with Julia Roberts returning home to her man, Ashton Kutcher and Jennifer Garner trying to get past bad love with (respectively) Jessica Alba and Patrick Dempsey, Jessica Biel celebrating loneliness, Topher Grace and phone-sex operator Anne Hathaway hooking up (the equivalent of the porn actors’ subplot in Love, Actually and the most fun story), Taylor Swift dancing (clearly George Soros already had the fix in!), Shirley Maclaine making a big reveal to spouse Hector Elizondo and Queen Latifah demonstrating discipline. Marshall went on to duplicate the formula with New Year’s Eve and Mother’s Day. “I’m 52 and wearing a bright blue shirt to work — please don’t make this day any harder than it already is.”

As I’m giving a talk on steampunk TV next month, I thought I’d finally watch all of Q.E.D., a 1982 steampunk series that lasted all of six episodes (I imagine it was doing theater that kept me from catching it). Sam Waterston plays Quentin E. Deverill, a brilliant but acerbic American scientist in 1912; when his colleagues laugh at his theory radio waves could someday transmit images, he sulks off to England. There he finds himself embroiled in a battle of wits with Scientist of Evil Kilkiss (Julian Glover), who’s latest plot is to provide the Kaiser with missiles that can be launched from Europe and blast London to kingdom come.

This, unfortunately, was the high-point for the science-fictional side of this. Deverill and his team subsequently deal with a deadly poison gas and a super-powerful automobile before things switch to the mundane for the last couple of episodes: no Kilkiss and stories involving a fake ghost and then drug-dealing in Limehouse. I don’t feel distraught we didn’t get more. “I hate doing this but Lombroso’s theory of the innate criminal type was wrong anyway.”

DISNEY’S TEACHER’S PET (2004) spun off from a one-season animated series in which Spot (Nathan Lane) attends school disguised as a boy because it’s the closest to being human he can get. In this film he gets closer when he discovers Florida Man and Mad Scientist Kelsey Grammer has developed a ray that can turn an animal into a human. Of course, things aren’t going to be that simple … Goofy, weird and very, very funny with Easter eggs referencing everything from Young Frankenstein to the Clark Gable/Doris Day Teacher’s Pet. The voice cast includes Debra Jo Rupp, Paul Reubens, Wallace Shawn and David Ogden Stiers. “This is no time to stand around screaming silently!”

GHOSTBUSTERS: Afterlife (2021) has Spengler’s long-estranged daughter (Carrie Coon) and her kids move out to Oklahoma where he retreated to a spooky old farm, taking most of the Ghostbuster tech with im (“He cleaned us out!”). His daughter assumed he was just a loonie who didn’t care for her or his grandkids but brainy Phoebe (McKenna Grace) discovers Spengler’s real agenda was to stop the second coming of Zuul — only he didn’t succeed …  A fun sequel that would double bill well with the next-gen Bill and Ted Face the Music. The living members of the original team return and Dana (Sigourney Weaver) and Venkman (Bill Murray) get a cute post-credits scene. “I command you under the National Invasive Species Act to depart this world immediately!”

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The new normal is working out okay

As I wrote a week ago, even though Plushie’s back is better, we’re not going to let him run up and down the stairs or jump off the couch the way we used to (occasionally he’ll manage it but not often). That means lots of time sitting with him in the cage on the floor while I work or (this afternoon) on a caged couch with him (TYG sits on the couch with him too). It’s not ideal but we’re making it work. This means Trixie sometimes winds up sitting alone for longer than usual; she’s on the couch too this afternoon and very needy. It’s hard to refuse her demands for petting because she’s my little girl and she’s very cute.The dogs weren’t as distracting as taking the car in to get some preventive maintenance done yesterday. I brought work but after three hours (I could have gone home to wait but the drive would have wasted more time) my mind simply ran out of steam. I didn’t regain steam when I finally got home so my day was largely shot. Frustrating.

Still, I got a fair amount of work done. I wrote a profile of Chapel Hill’s first female police chief for The Local Reporter. I edited more of Southern Discomfort and read one section to the writing group. As always the feedback was helpful and I edited further based on it. I’ve almost completed February’s portion of the editing on Savage Adventures. I highlighted a few details I’ll need to skim the original Doc Savage stories to check; I’ll get to that next week.Over at Atomic Junk Shop I wrote a post how the seemingly shocking changes to comics in 1968 now look less startling almost 60 years later and a second about Batman’s foe Anarky and the Son of Satan’s foes the Legion of Nihilists.

Oh, and I sold one of my paperbacks though due to Amazon’s reporting methods I don’t know which of these books it is yet, or how many. But whoever you are, if you’re reading this post, thanks for buying.

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I’m not sure this wine label makes sense

It’s called Prophecy but what has that to do with this image?It doesn’t appear to be a Tarot figure. One of my friends suggested a “wheel of time” aspect; I can’t think of anything better.

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I don’t believe there’s an atom of meaning in Trump’s supposed abortion moderation

According to the New York Times Trump favors a 16-week abortion ban with rape/incest/life of the mother exceptions. And doesn’t want to pick vice president who disagrees.

I am unimpressed.

As the article notes, Trump has been all over the map on abortion, including at one point calling for penalties for the mother, which the forced-birth movement pretends it opposes. There’s no particular reason to believe him this time, especially as it’s presented as his personal, private views not an official stance. Biden’s personal Catholic views are anti-abortion — he just doesn’t want that imposed into law. NYT reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan should know perfectly well that Trump’s innermost feelings have nothing to do with what’s important — what policies he’ll push and what bills he’ll sign. As LGM says,  “The abortion criminalization movement is also perfectly well aware that Trump will sign any federal abortion ban that Congress puts on his desk, and its more sophisticated members understand that Trump lying or obfuscating his position makes such a ban more likely.”

It’s telling that Trump’s spokesperson, Karoline Leavitt, says in the article “he would sit down with both sides and negotiate a deal that everyone will be happy with.” That is a lie because there is no deal everyone would be happy with, though it fits Trump’s pretense he’s an awesome deal-maker. The article says Trump’s’s criticized Republicans for talking too much about a stronger ban, but that’s not to say he’d oppose it. A number of Republicans say they should soft-pedal their view that women are aquariums until they have the power to put it into law. If that means more women die, well it’s the fish in the aquarium that matters, not the container.

The religious right have been loyal too him precisely because he’s been loyal to them: if he gets into office, given his enthusiasm for dictatorship, who’s to say what he’d do? Especially given a total abortion ban is high on the right-wing agenda if they get power again. Besides, it’s not as if Trump personally needs to push an abortion ban to ban abortion. Keep allowing private lawsuits against doctors who provide abortions. Keep steering women to crisis-pregnancy/forced-birth centers even though they’re not medical centers (something forced-birthers want the right to lie about). Ban abortion drugs. Restricting access to prenatal tests.  Unleashing the old Comstock Act. Even if he does none of those, a national ban won’t, I’m sure, affect states that already have tougher laws — just the blue states with more generous ones.

Abortion is far from the only reason for fighting a Trump presidency but it’s an important one.

In Missouri, meanwhile, Sen. Rick Brattin says forcing rape victims to carry the baby could be what they need to heal. I’m guessing leaving it up to the individual victim doesn’t suit him. Rep. Sandy Crawford says she opposes abortion for rape victims because God doesn’t make mistakes. Right, rape can be god’s plan but not abortion. And Senator Bill Eigel protests that the exemption means “kids can get abortions in the state of Missouri” — even one-year-olds (yes, he said it!).

The Hill, meanwhile, points out the problems with making perfect pregnant women the face of abortion rights.

For more horrible forced-birth arguments and why they’re bullshit, check out my Undead Sexist Cliches, available as a Amazon paperback, an ebook and from several other retailers. Cover by Kemp Ward.

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Sherlock Holmes: which facts are incidental, which are vital

Once again it’s time for a Sherlock Holmes quote that turns out to be about writing: “it is of the highest importance to the art of detection to be able to determine, out of a number of facts, which are incidental and which vital.” (from The Reigate Puzzle).Back in the first year of this blog, I discussed Orson Scott Card’s theory that you can build a story around four things: setting, puzzle, character or event. The thing is, while a short story may involve a single one of the four, novels frequently require two or more.

Southern Discomfort for instance, is primarily a character story. Maria Esposito starts out burdened with guilt over a past tragedy, closed off from everyone and unable to do a job she loves, nursing. The book ends with her free of guilt, reconnected with the world and going to work for Doctors Without Borders. However it’s also a book about the setting, Pharisee County, Georgia.

For 300 years Pharisee’s residents have benefited from having Olwen and Aubric, two elves, guiding things from behind the scene. When the book starts, Aubric’s been murdered and everything is unstable: the forces of nature have become unmoored, Olwen’s still a target for the killer and Pharisee’s social structure risks becoming unmoored. By the end of the book stability has been restored, but not the status quo: things are changing, for better or worse. In a sense, Pharisee gets its own character arc.

But I could also make the case it’s an event story. It starts with Pharisee under attack, ends with the threat eliminated. As Holmes says, knowing which of these plot elements is incidental, which is vital is essential to finding my way through the maze of possible story choices.

I’m applying the same analysis to Let No Man Put Asunder as I review the first draft and think about the second Which of Card’s four elements is incidental, which the heart (for all Card’s loathsome politics, I still find his analysis useful).

It’s definitely not “about” the setting in the way Southern Discomfort is. It does have character arcs for protagonists Paul and Mandy. It’s also very much an “event” story: something happens in the first chapter that throws their world out of kilter, then they spend the rest of the book struggling to right the ship. But there’s a puzzle element as Mandy and Paul have to figure out why this weirdness has engulfed them.

With a puzzle story you start by posing a question, then end by answering it. I don’t think that’s where Asunder is going. While “why is this happening?” is a constant refrain throughout the story, the real focus is “how can we stay alive and free long enough to find out?” That’s much more about events; as I said last month, it’s very much in the “menace” genre where a lurking threat constantly imperils everyone (as in some of Lester Dent’s fiction).

Menace stories can be mysteries. The Doc Savage novel The Squeaking Goblin has a menace — the eponymous villain’s constant attacks on the Raymond family — but the focus is as much on why, and who the villain is, as it is on stopping him. In the typical Fu Manchu novel, by contrast, Sir Dennis Nayland Smith and his allies know who the villain is and what he wants; the challenge is stopping him.

While I’ve been thinking about the book primarily as a mystery — Paul and Mandy don’t know who the Community of All are or what the Community wants with them — I suspect it will play better if I treat it as event more than mystery. That would allow me to reveal more of what’s going on sooner, rather than holding for a big reveal at the climax. As Alfred Hitchcock told Francois Truffaut, resolving the mystery before the end keeps the audience focused on whatever you want the climax to be about instead of guessing about the reveal.

It’s also more event than character story. Mandy and Paul do have personal problems they’re dealing with but those problems don’t propel the plot — the threat from the Community’s killers does. That said, the story definitely needs stronger character arcs: Paul has a decent one in the first draft but Mandy doesn’t. The first draft ends with the downfall of the bad guys, then Mandy and Paul wrapping up their personal shit. I think that works and will probably remain but the details need to change.

Once I have the beginning and the end I can work on the arc in between. As I said in that previous post, the plot of the first draft doesn’t progress or arc, it just moves them across the game board. That won’t do.

Hopefully these insights will help as I start replotting.

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