• nanometre@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I mean both, I’ll try to elaborate a bit, hopefully that helps!

    1. It’s okay to not be a fan of a certain type of story telling (in this case non-chronological)

    However

    1. Do you struggle with the story telling because of the chronology or is it really because it’s outside of your comfort zone due to the content (a transgender person’s journey)?

    Elliott wrote the story that way to make a point, that a transgender person’s journey is not linear.

    Sometimes, I think we as people put the focus on something that isn’t the actual issue. But it takes a lot of reflection and introspection and can be uncomfortable.

    I have not read the book, so I don’t know if I would consider it bad story telling or not, it’s just something worth considering, in my humble opinion.

    • Hotchpotch@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Thanks for elaborating!

      Most people who try their hands on this book probably know wether they like this kind of story telling (if they get that information before) and wether a trans persons biography is outside their comfort zone. Some will even read it because it’s outside of it. But i suspect biased people will use the non-linear story telling as a pretext to bash the book and thereby the story and person behind it.

      Sometimes, I think we as people put the focus on something that isn’t the actual issue. But it takes a lot of reflection and introspection and can be uncomfortable.

      Yes, that’s so true. I still have to work on it, despite many years of practice.

      On another note, this conversation made me read the wikipedia article on Page and rather curious about the book. I barely knew their name before and never saw a film with him.