I've been thinking about this for a while now.
Every time someone asks if I would consider writing a sequel to Fault Line
from Ani's POV. Every time someone asks why I chose to write Ben's story
instead of Ani's.
And the answer is both simple and deeply
complicated.
The simple answer is this: I didn't want to write
from a rape survivor's POV because that's been done and done very well. Speak,
Rape Girl, Where the Stars Shine, The Mockingbirds, Faking Normal. These
are all incredible books I've read about sexual violence told from a survivor's
POV. And each of these books add different and important insights into the
survivor experience.
The complicated answer is this: It would hurt too
much.
The thing about being a survivor and working in
anti-rape activism in the way that I do is that I spend most of every day in
that POV. People share their terrible stories and demonstrate their incredible
strength and these things become part of who I am. These stories fit into the
mosaic of me and make me keep fighting. They build me up so that crappy rape
apologists and victim-blamers matter less, because what many of us are trying
to do to end rape matters so much more.
I think all writers collect stories to a certain
extent. And because of who I am and what I do, I tend to collect certain types
of stories more than others. This is something I'm deeply grateful for. There
is nothing I'm prouder of than being a person that survivors can disclose to
and know they are safe, they will be believed and understood. You have no idea
how important that is. It is frequently what keeps survivors from disclosing in
the first place, this fear that they will not be believed, or worse, will
somehow be blamed for what happened to them.
But hearing stories also leaves me exposed in a
way. I've talked about vicarious trauma before. It is common in anyone who
works longterm in the anti-sexual violence movement. It is hard not to take on
these stories as your own, especially when you have the ability to speak out
and fight while survivors frequently have not found their voice to do so. And
I've actually done really well with vicarious trauma over the past fifteen
years I've been involved in this cause because I have an amazing support
network of friends and family who have lifted me up and held me when I most
needed it. And I have learned to make these stories part of who I am without
losing the rest of me.
However, every time I even consider writing Ani's
story I find I cannot. I'm too close. It's too personal. These characters have
become real to me because they're comprised of so many real moments I've
witnessed or experienced in my life. Getting inside Ani's head would require me
to open the box of every story I've ever heard, open the box of my own story,
and the real truth is those stories are sacred to me. I don't want them put out
in the public to be criticized and torn apart. I don't want Ani left
unprotected in that way, I guess.
When I first trained as a rape victim advocate, one
of the things we learned was that our biggest responsibility in the ER was to
do everything possible to re-empower survivors. Give them as many choices as
possible. Let them know they could say no to things that made them
uncomfortable. Assure them that we would advocate for them if they didn't feel
they could do it themselves.
I sort of feel the same way about Ani. In my head,
I want to give her the choice to share her story or not. Even more, I want the
people who know her story to recognize it as a gift, not to start criticizing
her for choices, blaming her for whatever.
This post has gotten a little dark and I don't mean
for it to be. I mean for it to be an explanation more than anything else. And I
continue to be grateful for all the conversations started by this book. I
continue to be grateful for all my readers. I continue to be grateful for
everyone who is fighting in this cause. You all humble me.
2 comments:
I'm very glad you chose to protect Ani.
I understand/agree with all your reasons for not writing Ani's POV, and I appreciate the way you wrote Fault Line. I'm sure it was very difficult to do. I wanted to add something else. I have read second books written from the POV of the other main character. And they were okay, but honestly, most of the time, I found it was really just reading the same first book all over again, even if it explained what went on in the head of the other character (*there are exceptions). I understand readers want to know MORE about characters they loved, I like that myself, but there are other ways to satisfy readers than rehashing the same plot. I think most authors have many stories in them, and I love to read their NEW stories!
Having said what is only my opinion, I'll add this: thank you for all you endure as an advocate for the vulnerable victims of sexual abuse.
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