Breaking Boundaries
LGBTQ2 Writers on Coming Out and Into Canada
- Publisher
- Rebel Mountain Press
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2019
- Category
- General, Own Voices, Anthologies (multiple authors)
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780994730275
- Publish Date
- Apr 2019
- List Price
- $13.95
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9789947302767
- Publish Date
- Apr 2019
- List Price
- $13.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Breaking Boundaries: LGBTQ2 Writers on Coming Out and Into Canada is an anthology of fiction, personal essay, and poetry by LGBTQ2 writers (Canada-born, immigrated, or refugee). The common thread throughout is that for LGBTQ2 people, Canada is the place to be. Nominated for the 2019 GEORGE RYGA AWARD for social awareness. Authors: Teryl Berg, Kyle Chen, Wendy J. Cutler, Corrie H. Furst, Kevin Henry, Anne Hofland, Chantal Hughes, Masaki Kidokoro, Dale Lee Kwong, Austin Lee, JL Lori, Eka Nasution and Rainer Oktovianus (narrators), Adam Nixon, Gail Marlene Schwartz, Caelan Sinclair, LS Stone, Sosania Tomlinson, E.T. Turner, Hayley Zacks. Teacher resources available on publisher website: rebelmountainpress.com/breaking-boundaries-teacher-resources
About the authors
Lori Shwydky graduated Vancouver Island University (VIU) in 2016 with a BA in Creative Writing. She resides in Nanoose Bay, BC.
Robin Stevenson is the award-winning author of more than 25 books for kids and teens, including the board book Pride Colors, the picture book Ghost’s Journey: A Refugee Story and the nonfiction books Kid Activists and Pride: The Celebration and the Struggle. The first edition of her nonfiction book Pride: Celebrating Diversity & Community (2016) won a Stonewall Honor and was shortlisted for numerous other awards. Robin lives in Victoria, British Columbia, where she attends Pride celebrations with her family every year, but always leaves her dog safely at home.
Awards
- Nominated, Georga Ryga Award
Excerpt: Breaking Boundaries: LGBTQ2 Writers on Coming Out and Into Canada (edited by Lori Shwydky; introduction by Robin Stevenson)
Excerpts from: Escaping Indonesia
For most, Indonesia is an idyllic tourist destination with tropical rainforests, paradise-like beaches, and exotic species like the Komodo Dragon, Javan rhinoceros, and orangutans. But for LGBTQ Indonesians, like Rainer Oktovianus and his husband, Eka Nasution, Indonesia is a hotbed of hate and oppression.
Indonesia does not have specific laws against homosexuality. However, it is primarily an Islamic country with a population that is 80 percent Muslim. The laws conform to Islamic culture and morals, so local government will often punish individuals that deviate from these morals. Government committee members publicly share their Muslim beliefs, which condemn homosexuality. These discriminatory comments which are featured on the news keep the national hysteria going, like gas on a fire. A strong Islamic group, the Islamic Defender Front (FPI) targets LGBT by destroying nightclubs and bars, attacking transvestites, and assaulting LGBT members with bamboo clubs, stones, and machetes.
It was at the 2010 Q! Film Festival that Rainer, a committee member, met Eka, a festival volunteer, and they soon started dating. Rainer and Eka come from very different backgrounds. Rainer was adopted by a single mom who raised him in a strict Christian household. Eka had two Muslim parents and read the Quran every day.
In 2014, after dating four years, Rainer and Eka went on a two-week vacation to Ontario and decided to get married. They were legally wed in Ottawa. It was easy to get married in Canada; they didn't have to be a resident, but just needed a passport. It would take three months, however, to receive the marriage certificate by mail. It is common for international mail to be opened by government officials in Indonesia, so Rainer and Eka were very nervous about being discovered. The 12-week wait was like a "ticking time bomb," but luckily, they received the certificate unopened.
Editorial Reviews
"What does it mean to be LGBTQ2 in Canada? The only possible answer to that question is one given in many voices. That is exactly what this book offers. There is struggle in these stories and poems, but there is also strength and resilience, compassion and determination. Woven together these voices leave me with a sense of hopefulness: a belief that the creativity and fierce commitment of our community will carry us forward as we work to create a Canada that lives up to the dream of freedom and safety it represents to so many people around the world."-Robin Stevenson, author of Pride: Celebrating Diversity and Community
"There are mature and rigorously insightful pieces here, like Gail Marlene Schwartz's "Threads," incredible non-linear and poignant vignettes that move back and forth across time and place to painstakingly detail the narrator's anxieties in relation to her sexuality. The result is a stunningly moving coming-of-age piece. Anne Hofland's "Are You a Lesbian?" is yet another reflexive essay showcasing a profound maturity in thinking about the very craft of writing and how it might be honed to writing about oneself. She examines what it means to look back across the decades, and to have witnessed the shifts, the ebbs and flows, that have occurred in the scene of queer history and politics in Canada."-Malahat Review
"An excellent anthology of LBGTQ2+ content. While I am not part of the community, reading this did give me better insight and I hope I can use that to be a better, more supportive ally to members of the LGBTQ2+ community. I think more people should read this whether they are straight or not."-Noelle Walsh
Other titles by
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Kid Innovators
True Tales of Childhood from Inventors and Trailblazers
Pride
The Celebration and the Struggle
Ghost's Journey
A Refugee Story
My Body, My Choice
The Fight for Abortion Rights