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In
Talk (Frances Foster Books/FSG, 2005, $16), her latest
young adult novel, writer Kathe Koja tells the story of gay male
high school student Kit and his experiences in the drama club
at Faulkner High School. Cast as Reed, the male lead in the controversial
play Talk, Kit discovers that the acting skills he has
honed by trying to act straight and not reveal his secret come
in handy. But soon things that are out of his control force him
to confront himself in ways he had never imagined. I recently
spoke with Ms. Koja about Talk.
|
AfterElton.com:
What can you tell me about your experiences in writing for a YA (young
adult) audience?
Kathe Koja: I love writing YA (just as I love reading
it) because so much of what it means to be young, means intensity. There
is no time in our lives when the changes are so rapid--physical changes,
emotional changes, philosophical changes, as we begin to make sense of
the world by ourselves and on our own--and for a writer, this is wonderful
territory. Also, I believe that YA writing demands great honesty, a commitment
to telling the truth as best I can.
AE:
Much of your novel Talk revolves around the theater department of a high
school. Did you do theater in high school?
KK: I tried out for The Crucible, if that counts! No, I wasn't a real
theater person in high school.
AE:
In my experience, theater was one of the few places where gay and straight
students mixed comfortably in high school. Would you say that is still
true today?
KK: I think so. I'm sure the experience differs from school to school,
but drama club is usually a welcoming environment.
AE:
Talk is written from a couple of different points of view, including
that of Kit, a gay high school student. What can you tell me about writing
in the voice of a gay male teen?
KK: As with any character, I did my best to be as true
to him--to the Kit I saw in my head, the boy who was funny, and hopeful,
and kind--as I could be. Talk began with a mental picture, of this boy
sitting in the theater seat with his friend, looking at the bare stage.
Who was he? What was he doing there? I asked those questions, and Kit
began to take shape, and answer them. I like all the characters in my
books, even the bad ones--perhaps "like" is not the word; "understand"
is better. If I didn't understand them, I couldn't write about them, I
can't hope to make real what I can't see. But I do have favorites, and
Kit is definitely one of them.
AE:
Another fascinating aspect of Talk is that you crafted a play
(called Talk) within the novel. What were the challenges involved
in doing that?
KK: Many! I admire playwrights very much--their task
is harder than a novelist's, I think: the playwright has to move live
people around in actual space, in real time, where a novelist can put
them anywhere with just a few keystrokes. Plus the language of a play
versus the language of a novel--though both are "literary" in
a certain sense--are very different: one is meant to be experienced silently,
one aloud. It was a learning experience to be sure, and great fun, to
pretend to be a playwright for one book. It was also the best way, I thought,
to tell not only the intertwining stories of Kit and Lindsay as people,
but as actors as well, and to pose some of the novel's central questions--about
identity, fear, repression--in another way.
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