No Boys Allowed: School visits as a woman writer
Iâve been doing school visits as part of my tour for PRINCESS ACADEMY: The Forgotten Sisters. All have been terrificâgreat kids, great librarians. But something happened at one I want to talk about. Iâm not going to name the school or location because I donât think itâs a problem with just one school; itâs just one example of a much wider problem.
This was a small-ish school, and I spoke to the 3-8 grades. It wasnât until I was partway into my presentation that I realized that the back rows of the older grades were all girls.
Later a teacher told me, âThe administration only gave permission to the middle school girls to leave class for your assembly. I have a boy student who is a huge fan of SPIRIT ANIMALS. I got special permission for him to come, but he was too embarrassed.â
âBecause the administration had already shown that they believed my presentation would only be for girls?â
âYes,â she said.
I tried not to explode in front of the children.
Letâs be clear: I do not talk about âgirlâ stuff. I do not talk about body parts. I do not do a âYour Menstrual Cycle and You!â presentation. I talk about books and writing, reading, rejections and moving through them, how to come up with story ideas. But because Iâm a woman, because some of my books have pictures of girls on the cover, because some of my books have âprincessâ in the title, Iâm stamped as âfor girls only.â However, the male writers who have boys on their covers speak to the entire school.
This has happened a few times before. I donât believe itâs ever happened in an elementary schoolâjust middle school or high school.
I remember one middle school 2-3 years ago that I was going to visit while on tour. I heard in advance that they planned to pull the girls out of class for my assembly but not the boys. Iâd dealt with that in the past and didnât want to be a part of perpetuating the myth that women only have things of interest to say to girls while menâs voices are universally important. Â I told the publicist that this was something I wasnât comfortable with and to please ask them to invite the boys as well as girls. I thought it was taken care of. When I got there, the administration told me with shrugs that theyâd heard I didnât want a segregated audience but thatâs just how it was going to be. Should I have refused? Embarrassed the bookstore, let down the girls who had been looking forward to my visit? I did the presentation. But I felt sick to my stomach. Later I asked what other authors had visited. Theyâd had a male writer. For his assembly, both boys and girls had been invited.
I think most people reading this will agree that leaving the boys behind is wrong. And yetâwhen giving books to boys, how often do we offer ones that have girls as protagonists? (Princesses even!) And if we do, do we qualify it: âEven though itâs about a girl, I think youâll like it.â Even though. Weâre telling them subtly, if not explicitly, that books about girls arenât for them. Even if a boy would never, ever like any book about any girl (highly unlikely) if we donât at least offer some, weâre reinforcing the ideology.
I heard it a hundred times with Hunger Games: âBoys, even though this is about a girl, youâll like it!â Even though. I never heard a single time, âGirls, even though Harry Potter is about a boy, youâll like it!â
The belief that boys wonât like books with female protagonists, that they will refuse to read them, the shaming that happens (from peers, parents, teachers, often right in front of me) when they do, the idea that girls should read about and understand boys but that boys donât have to read about girls, that boys arenât expected to understand and empathize with the female population of the worldâĻ.this belief directly leads to rape culture. To a culture that tells boys and men, it doesnât matter how the girl feels, what she wants. You donât have to wonder. She is here to please you. She is here to do what you want. No one expects you to have to empathize with girls and women. As far as you need be concerned, they have no interior life.
At this recent school visit, near the end I left time for questions. Not one student had a question. In 12 years and 200-300 presentations, Iâve never had that happen. So I filled in the last 5 minutes reading them the first few chapters of The Princess in Black, showing them slides of the illustrations. BTW Iâve never met a boy who didnât like this book.
After the presentation, I signed books for the students who had pre-ordered my books (all girls), but one 3rd grade boy hung around.
âDid you want to ask her a question?â a teacher asked.
âYes,â he said nervously, âbut not now. Iâll wait till everyone is gone.â
Once the other students were gone, three adults still remained. He was still clearly uncomfortable that we werenât alone but his question was also clearly important to him. So he leaned forward and whispered in my ear, âDo you have a copy of the black princess book?â
It broke my heart that he felt he had to whisper the question.
He wanted to read the rest of the book so badly and yet was so afraid what others would think of him. If he read a âgirlâ book. A book about a princess. Even a monster-fighting superhero ninja princess. He wasnât born ashamed. We made him ashamed. Ashamed to be interested in a book about a girl. About a princessâthe most âgirlieâ of girls.
I wish Iâd had a copy of The Princess in Black to give him right then. The bookstore told him they were going to donate a copy to his library. I hope heâs brave enough to check it out. I hope he keeps reading. I hope he changes his own story. I hope all of us can change this story. Iâm really rooting for a happy ending.
I know this isnât Gosling related, but as a female writer who writes about women, this is important. Also read:Â http://ideas.ted.com/why-boys-should-read-girl-books/?utm_campaign=social&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=t.co&utm_content=ideas-blog&utm_term=humanities











