Carry On by Rainbow Rowell7/2/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() And slash tends to appear in the media and mainstream to accompanying derision, eyerolls, and incorrect assumptions. Other fictional treatments of fandom in the past, especially in YA literature, have tended to portray fannish obsession as a hindrance to real life rather than an aid. But, as I told Rowell then, I’d had serious trouble getting through it because it was almost too much I cared too much about its subject, because in many ways I was its subject.įangirl was about a young, introverted female writer who writes fanfiction-not just fanfiction, slash. It had spoken to everyone I knew my new roommate and I had bonded over it when we moved in together. I desperately wanted to interview her because I was a fandom reporter, and her book, Fangirl, was quietly revolutionizing the publishing world’s view of fandom. ![]() Those were my fifth-year fantasies: kisses and blood and Snow ridding the world of me.Ī couple of years ago, I exchanged emails with Rainbow Rowell, the author of the recently released Young Adult novel Carry On. ![]()
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