Natural Beauty Author Ling Ling Huang on Body Horror and Modern Beauty Standards

Mindy: Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Ling Ling Huang, author of Natural Beauty, which is a body horror genre - which I think is a fantastic way to talk about a genre. It's also darkly funny, and it has all of these different elements working within it to kind of investigate the world of beauty and how far we'll go to be beautiful. So first of all, thank you for being here and if you could just tell us a little bit about Natural Beauty.

Ling Ling: Sure. Thank you so much for having me. Natural Beauty is about this really talented pianist who is at a conservatory. Because of a terrible accident that happens to her parents, she's kind of forced to give up this really promising career, and she lands at this very high paid wellness and clean beauty store. Really drinks the Kool-Aid, but also starts to uncover kind of all of these sinister, dark things about the entire industry as she stays on.

Mindy: Some of the elements in the book are really interesting in that you take elements of the beauty world that exist today, that are actually really familiar, like... How do we keep our collagen going? How do we make sure our skin still has that elasticity? How do we keep our hair in great shape? And you take it to an extreme. So like, for example, one of my favorite things... You mentioned an actual parasite that the beauty store sells that is basically releasing hundreds of mites into people's hair. And it eats all of the dirt and the oil, and it keeps their hair really, really clean and their scalp really, really clean. But they also have a hive of mites on their head. But people are willing to do that. And of course, for an exorbitant price. And I think it is so interesting... You found these fears that we all have. Especially women. Our looks and comparisons and getting older and all of the elements of our lives that are difficult, you just kind of went, okay, what if? How far would we go?

Ling Ling: Yes. That was kind of difficult because there were so many ideas that I had, and then I would do a quick Google and, you know, it would be something that's already in development or used somewhere in the world. If I wanted to make sure this was a fiction novel, I had to really reach, and they are kind of all things that I could see being used in the next 5 to 10 years. I know it sounds kind of gross on the face of it, the whole mites situation, but I feel like I know those people who would love just being able to wake up and roll out of bed with great hair and not need to shower.

Mindy: Of all the treatments that you mentioned, that one was the one where I was like, "Oh yeah, I would do that."

Ling Ling: I feel like I could have used that my entire college experience.

Mindy: When we talk about this book, I often hear it described as body horror and as like a horror novel in this like social sense. So, was that your intention when you first started writing it?

Ling Ling: It definitely wasn't my intention, and actually I didn't quite realize it was a horror novel and especially a body horror. It's something that early readers were saying about it, and that was so interesting to me. But I almost feel like it's impossible to write about a woman's experience, especially in this country, without going into the horror genre. I'm happy with where it landed, but I was definitely surprised and it wasn't my intention.

Mindy: It fits very well there because it is horrifying. One of the things that I particularly enjoyed that I want to talk about as a feminist... One of the things that you point out is that they're all kind of competing against each other in a way. They're friendly, and of course there's a little bit of a relationship with our main character and Helen. But they are also always comparing one another to themselves. And if someone else's lashes are a little bit longer, they're going to go get that silkworm treatment. They're going to tweak themselves to keep up. We do that now. We don't have to have special sci fi beauty treatments. We do that now.

Ling Ling: Yeah, for sure. It's something, especially with like influencer culture and things like that. I teach a lot of young violin students, and so many of them struggle with what they see on the screen all the time. I remember talking to a 12 year old about her eating disorder, and it had gotten so bad. And it's because, you know, you can look at hundreds, thousands of amazingly beautiful people, and you just have this constant desire and need to keep up. And it can feel so overwhelming. And I've definitely seen it reflected in every workplace that I've worked in, whether it be music or wellness. It's tragic because we kind of lose touch with what we actually would want to look like, any of our actual interests, and we get disconnected from our bodies because we're so interested in changing them on a cellular level. Which is horrific. I would have loved to do more of that, maybe even an entire book, because it is so complex. The ways that women love each other and support each other but feel the need to keep up with one another and outdo each other.

Mindy: Absolutely. And it sabotages our relationships with our bodies, but also our relationships with other women. I think that society, especially Western society, does a really good job of making us believe that other women are the enemy.

Ling Ling: Absolutely. It's something I definitely bought into for way too long. I think only in my like early to mid 20s did I start reading enough great feminist writers and thinkers that made me understand that it was just this system that had made us really competitive with one another, and it kept us distracted from all of the real issues that need our attention.

Mindy: Yeah, absolutely. It's a divide and conquer. Patriarchy wins.

Ling Ling: Yes.

Mindy: Something else that I thought was really interesting that you touched on was the idealized beauty being a Western image, a European image. One of the things that our main character changing her appearances in pretty drastic ways, but there isn't a lot of description about her. However, when she is asked to come up with a different name, a less ethnic name to have on her nametag or to use to introduce herself when she's on the floor in the store, which I want to follow up on that in a second, she's asked to pick a different name. And then she has a conversation with another employee that she never thought was anything other than a white woman who actually wasn't, and her appearance had changed so much. And what was what was your intention there?

Ling Ling: You know, I grew up in Houston, Texas, and until like middle school, there was one other East Asian classmate that I had. I would have always wanted to have the main character's trajectory... to wake up with my hair getting lighter. I used so much sun-in and lemon juice. It was something that I would have really wanted. And in many ways, the products that are sold to us at any beauty store kind of uphold this ideal of beauty that is very Westernized and Eurocentric. And so I wanted to take that to the extreme. What if I had gotten everything I wanted as an elementary and middle schooler? What would my life be like now? I think for a long time I just didn't realize that there was something to lose in assimilating. Every time that's happened in my life, when I've achieved some goal that I've been taught to want and which I haven't really questioned, like, Is this what I want? I've been so disappointed that it doesn't actually equal happiness.

Mindy: That is so accurate. Oh, my goodness. I know this is your debut novel, which we should talk about in a second. I was trying to get published for ten years, and it was such a struggle. And last month, my 12th book came out. If 44 year old Mindy could have spoken to 30 year old Mindy and been like, Dude, you're going to be living off your writing income. You're going to have 12 books out. I would have been like, Man, she has her shit together. Like that 44 year old Mindy is on cloud nine. And it's like, no. I mean, I literally have everything I could want, and I still have shitty days.

Ling Ling: Yeah. That's been some of the experience of this. I keep trying to remember like, remember just even a year ago or two years ago how many antidepressants you were on because like you couldn't get an agent? But it's hard because I think I've internalized such a large amount of anxiety that any new opportunity kind of becomes a new opportunity to be anxious.

Mindy: That's the truth, because you have to make a decision. And then it's like, "Oh, I can't do that."

Ling Ling: Exactly. So there's just a lot of anxiety. I remember feeling kind of the same way with getting a puppy during the pandemic. I was like, "This is supposed to be the happiest moment of my life. Why is it so difficult?" I struggled with really bad eating disorders. I would reach like the goal weight that I had set for myself, and I would realize, "Oh, it just means that I'm at this weight. It doesn't make me happy or beautiful or white." Any of the things I had kind of been hoping for and didn't realize.

Mindy: Yeah, we never stop chasing something. I am probably in the best physical shape I've ever been in in my life, and I work out a lot. I probably weigh a healthy weight in terms of like fat versus muscle. I look better than I probably ever have in my life, and I'm stronger than I've ever been in my life. And I'm like, "God damn it, I have gray hair." It's like there's always... We're never happy. We're never happy.

Ling Ling: Are you telling me that women can't have it all? 

Mindy: I am. I am saying this.

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Mindy: I want to get back to talking about characters name, and I want to talk a little bit just about the beauty industry in general. A friend of mine is an esthetician, and she used to work at a pretty high end place where they worked on your face and you got massages and facials and she worked with body hair and waxing and all those things. And she worked at a really nice chain, but like a very high end chain. And she has a very pretty name, and there was nothing about it that was ethnic or anything like that. She is a white girl, and she has a really cool name. And they were like, "You need to pick a different name." And all of the girls on the floor had fake names. It was their work name. And they would give them a list of names and have them pick from it, because there was just a certain style and aesthetic that this particular chain wanted to have with their girls. And that was right down to what your name is. I just think that's bizarre. But it happens in real life. That is just a common practice at this particular chain. When I read that in Natural Beauty, where they have a conversation with our main character about picking a different name and they don't even really sugarcoat it. They just want it to be a whiter name. I just thought that was fascinating. And I know that you have a background that you did work in the high end beauty and wellness industry for a while. So, how much of that informed the book? Like the name changing? Is that an element that came in from real life?

Ling Ling: So I didn't know that that happens in real life. It's just been something my entire life that's kind of been implied to me and to other friends who have East Asian names. "That's an interesting name" or "that's difficult to spell"... Little things where you really feel like you're making someone else's life harder by having the name that you have. And the main character doesn't have a name because growing up, I kind of felt like I was a blank for whatever people's projections were. I do remember in school someone... I think it was like a teacher suggested that I have an English name. What about like Courtney? Yeah.

Mindy: Okay. That's horrible. I want to follow up on what you just said, because as a writer, I was fascinated as I was reading to discover about maybe 100 pages in, maybe 150 pages in... All of a sudden I was like, "Shit! I don't know her name." And then I realized that you purposefully never named your main character. And I was just like, "Oh my God. That is amazing." So I offer editorial services. Because the book is written in first person, when I'm reading first person, I will see people forget to let the reader know the name because it's just not something that comes up often, like in conversation or anything like that. So I actually, as a reader, didn't notice it until I was about a third of the way through the book. I thought it was very clever. Then later on, when she does adopt a whiter name, that name comes into use in the narrative. What was your driver there?

Ling Ling: I don't think about my identity as like a fixed thing, and names have a way of kind of pinning us down. And so at first it started as like, well, maybe not having a name so that everyone can kind of step into this person's shoes. Let's see where that takes us. But then I really liked the idea that everyone in her workplace would just project what they thought onto her as I've experienced so much. And also there is this stereotype often that East Asian people are passive. And so I kind of wanted to play with that and to see how it would shift for a reader to not have the name, the label, and then to have one suddenly. And would it make sense? Would it be really jarring for them suddenly to have such a Western name? It's always interesting when I meet someone and ask them what their name is, and it's something I really don't expect. If I go to a Chinese restaurant or something and they tell me their name is Courtney. And I know that's their work name. In some ways it's good. It probably protects certain people from customers. It's probably a choice a lot of them have made. Most of my friends who have not Western names, we have a Starbucks name because we don't want to have to spell something every time. So that was kind of the decision. And it also helped as a writer to be really close to the main character, to not have a name. 

Mindy: And I think it works for the reader, too. It's like as we're reading, there isn't a very distinct wall between yourself and the narrator. And so I thought that was a really interesting and subtle literary technique that you use there. I enjoyed it. You are a violinist. You perform. You travel. You are a professional musician. In the book, our main character is also a greatly talented musician, but her instrument is the piano. So why did you choose to not use your own instrument in that way? Or do you also play the piano?

Ling Ling: I did play the piano, but pretty poorly. And I quit 20 years ago, I think. My mom's a violin teacher, and my dad's a piano teacher. I think there's always been a little bit of guilt for focusing on my mom's instrument. And then there are so many great piano pieces that I wish I had gotten more advanced so that I could have played. And that's kind of the music that I listen to a lot because I get triggered by most violin music, or it becomes difficult to think about anything else if it's happening. But I love listening to piano concertos and sonatas, and they're really something I love running to. I love writing to. It's also so much easier to romanticize something that I don't do for work. I wanted to talk about classical music because I love it so much, but this kind of removed me enough to do it where it was really fun and felt like I was creating something new.

Mindy: That's so interesting. I also played the piano for a pretty long period of time as a child. I enjoyed it, and I practiced a lot and I was like, good enough. I didn't have any technique. I wanted to play loud, and I wanted to play fast. Those were always my goals.

Ling Ling: Nice.

Mindy: And that's what I did. I mean, I beat the crap out of the keys, and my piano teacher was the kindest, sweetest, like church organist. And she would just be like, "This is supposed to be in this time signature, and it is supposed to be this loud. What are you doing?" And I'm like, "No. Fast and loud. Fast and loud. That's what's great. That's what... I'm doing fast and loud." So it's like I am just not... Not a good musician in that way. But one of the things that I thought you did a great job of illustrating in the book, and people that aren't inside of that world probably aren't aware. But, you know, I would go to competitions and festivals and things like that. And man, it is fairly cutthroat. People are extremely serious about their craft and about their instrument and what they do. Again, as we were saying, women looking at each other as competitors rather than friends. And that's also there for our main character when she's thinking about her past with music and being at a conservatory and the competitive nature of the relationships that she had. Because she was so good, and everybody knew it. And so therefore she was to be hated. She was to be toppled. And it was just something I thought was extremely interesting because even in my limited experience of the music world, just going to competitions and things and meeting people who were so deadly serious about what they were doing. 

And it's like I was a musician, but I was also an athlete. And so it's like I would play sports where you're knocking each other down. You're getting hit with a ball. You're going to bleed. You're going to have scars from your sport. And so I was always kind of like, "Wow. You guys take the piano really seriously." But that's their corner. That's their jam. And they are very serious about what they do and it can mean so much. So, were you using that element of the competition and the comparisons from her childhood and music and then drawing that forward into the beauty world?

Ling Ling: Yes, definitely. I think I've experienced that competitiveness in both of those industries, and I think people in those industries... It can be really cultish the way that people in classical music and people in clean beauty, especially in wellness... It's like a cultish fanaticism toward what they think is good for your body and what they'll allow themselves to spend their time on. It's so intense, and they both really kind of believe the American dream that if you work hard enough, you can get the perfect functioning body and you can get to whatever performance hall you want. I was really inspired by this devotional aspect of both worlds, and I started this novel in my notes app on these long commutes I had between this job at a high end beauty store. And I was just drawing all of these parallels between the world I had just left and the world I was trying to step into. And maybe I'll discover that writing is similar. I don't know yet. But if you want to take something seriously, if you really want to be competitive, there are those people who are like that and you can go as far in that direction as you want.

Mindy: That's very true. I will say I think you will be pleasantly surprised by the publishing world. I have yet to run into animosity or a competitive feel. I definitely have moments where I'm like, "You know, I don't think that book is very good, and everyone loves it." But the truth is that in publishing, in particular, we always say a rising tide lifts all boats. If there's a book that your publisher has printed that is doing extraordinarily well and making millions of dollars and you're kind of pissed because it's not your book and you don't think it's that good... Your publisher just made a lot of money off this book and they might be able to pay you more next time for your book because of this book's success. If a book is out there that you don't really like that well and everybody else does, that book is going to find someone that maybe wouldn't read otherwise and turn them into a reader, and maybe that person will find you eventually. That's just how I've always... Well, I shouldn't say always. I had to come to that. But it's a good way to think about the publishing industry, and I think most of us do operate that way. I hope that you will find that publishing doesn't have that sharks blood in the water feel.

Ling Ling: Most people at a competition or in the music world, you're playing all the same pieces, and the beauty world, you're chasing the same beauty ideal. So and no one is like, you know, writing from the same exact formula for the same character and plot and stuff. There is so much more room. It hasn't felt that way, and I think it's probably unlikely. Don't want to rule it out because of some of the experiences I've had in in music, which is sad.

Mindy: So Natural Beauty is your debut novel. It just came out. What else have you got coming? Are you working on something new?

Ling Ling: I did immediately start working on another book. I think out of Imposter Syndrome. Right after I got this book deal, I was like, "Can I even do this again?" So I started working on something and I think, you know, this debut novel is so personal because I've worked in both industries mentioned. I'm also the daughter of immigrants. I wanted to challenge myself to see if I could write something totally different. The second thing that I've worked on, I don't think that it's truly a horror. But it does stay kind of speculative, and it's been fun knowing less about the fields that I'm talking about. This one is kind of more based in the performance art world, which is a world that fascinates me, but that I have no connection to. I have no idea what a career looks like for me. I just hope that I'll get to keep writing for fun. To have published novels would be amazing, but even just getting to write for fun is really great.

Mindy: Last thing. Why don't you let listeners know where they can find the book Natural Beauty, and also where they can find you online?

Ling Ling: Sure. So Natural Beauty should be in any stores. You can also find it online, Bookshop.org, Audible. I love the person who is reading the audiobook - Carolyn Kang. I love her voice. Instagram is at violing squared. V-I-O-L-I-N-G-S-Q-U-A-R-E-D.

Mindy: Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Natasha Preston on The Island: Writing A Large Cast, and the Time Suck of Social Media

Mindy:   Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Natasha Preston who has had a really interesting and amazing career. We're gonna be talking about The Island, which is her newest release coming on February 28th. But first, I wanna talk to you specifically about the beginning of your career because you have a very interesting career path in that you got started on Wattpad. And Wattpad was really something that launched you in a pretty big way. I think your name is probably the one that comes up the most whenever people talk about Wattpad and success in that arena. So, if you could talk a little bit about that and how that was so integral to your beginnings.

Natasha: Completely. I didn't even start writing before I found Wattpad. So I wouldn't be here at all today if it wasn't for that. It was about 2010, and I was just scrolling through the app store and I came across Wattpad. So I downloaded it and started just as a reader for quite some time before I decided that actually I have some ideas inside of me as well, and then I started to upload chapters.

Mindy:   And Wattpad is one of those things where it really is driven by word of mouth. It's driven by readers really liking and engaging with that content and then telling other readers about it. For me, I really think it is just one of the best examples of true word-of mouth grassroots fan-based readership.

Natasha: Yeah, definitely, and I met a lot of people through Wattpad. Some of them I'm still in contact with now. So you build a lot of friendships as well, and these people recommend you and you recommend them.

Mindy: I know that you had such great success there on that platform. Did you then decide to move out of that realm and look more into the realm of traditional publishing? Or were you doing so well, the agents and editors approached you?

Natasha: My friend, who was also on Wattpad, Kirsty Moseley, she self-published her first book, and she encouraged me to do the same. So I actually self-published first, and then my publisher, Sourcebooks, in the US, they picked up The Cellar. So then they traditionally published that one.

Mindy: Yes, and The Cellar was your first book that came out in the US. Ridiculously popular. So, I was a YA librarian. I worked in a public high school for 14 years. So, The Cellar came out in 2014, and I just remember all of my students were so in love with it. I couldn't keep it on the shelves. Colleen Hoover before TikTok. That's kind of what The Cellar was like, and then your subsequent titles as well. Something else that I wanted to talk to you about was your cover art. In the US, they're very stark, and they're very striking. Very much look like thriller covers almost even for adults. Your covers are amazing, and I think that that has been part of the appeal. Of course, just getting the eye drawn to get people to pick it up. Are your covers the same in the UK?

Natasha: Yeah, they are the same. I love them.

Mindy: Yeah. They are really beautiful. Did that come about through your publishers? Or you had something in mind already? Did they just happen to strike gold the first time?

Natasha: Pretty much gold, yeah. So when it was on Wattpad, I had a flower image on the cover of that one. The characters are renamed after flowers, so it was kind of pretty organic to have a flower theme.

Mindy: It really is. It's perfect. And then your subsequent titles, they match. Your publishers do a great job of branding you. It's kind of like Stephen King or Jodi Picoult's... When you see the cover, I don't even have to see your name to know that it's your book because the covers are so distinctive.

Natasha: Yeah, yeah. They’ve done a phenomenal job of carrying that through.

Mindy: So your next release, your newest release, is The Island. It revolves around 6 teen influencers who have accepted invitations to an all expenses paid trip to a luxury resort and amusement park. And then of course, when they get there things suddenly go quite wrong. I would love to hear more about where you got the idea for this book. I love that you're operating with kind of that closed room mystery in the sense that the room is an entire island and there are rollercoasters on it.

Natasha: Yes, it's pretty much... I think I was flicking through Instagram, and I was seeing like all these influencers. And they are rich! The idea came from that. Putting them all together and seeing what would happen if they are in a place where they can't escape. And I feel like quite a lot of influencers would go to an island if they were invited.

Mindy: Yeah, definitely. It's kind of like the Fyre Festival. Do you remember that?

Natasha: I don't.

Mindy: Fyre Festival... It was a US thing, so it is possible it didn't hit the news so much there in the UK. But Fyre Festival was this really hyped, big party. They had these promo videos made and it was like, "you were going to be hanging out with very rich, very beautiful people. Buy your tickets now. It's gonna be amazing." And then people got there and it was like hot dogs on sticks. Drift wood for your pillow. There was nowhere to pee. It was really bad.

Natasha: Oh no.

Mindy: It was really, really bad. Tell us a little bit more about The Island. What are your characters like? Because influencers in particular... I go back and forth. I'm a difficult person. I'll just say that. I'm a difficult person. Traditional marketing just doesn't work on me. I'm always a little bit cynical, and I'm always suspicious. So whenever someone is trying to sell something to me, I immediately shut down, and I'm just like, "No. I don't like you, and I don't want what you're selling."

Natasha: I don't believe you.

Mindy: Exactly. It also makes it difficult for me whenever I'm trying to think about marketing my stuff, because the traditional stuff that does work, I never wanna do that because it doesn't feel genuine to me. So talk to me a little bit about your characters and where you got the ideas for each of them as individuals because you are writing 6 different characters.

Natasha: Yeah, so the gamer, two beauty bloggers, Paisley, who is like a main character, she reports crime - love her - and then we have Harper who is book reviewer. So they all have very different personalities. Some of them are pretty cocky entitled. And then some of them are a little bit more reserved, and they grow throughout the book. Obviously, when somebody is out there trying to kill you, you have to try and mesh all these personalities together so they can defeat the bad guy together and get through it. And also one of them could be the killer.

Mindy: I think that would be very challenging. I tend to keep my casts pretty small - two or three like maybe four, and then some peripherals. But I think writing six and trying to build them and, of course, give all of them their own layers as well, and still creating a little bit of suspicion so you're keeping that mystery going for each one of them... I'm sure that was challenging.

Natasha: I did kill one of them pretty early so... It took it down a little bit.

Mindy: Did you do much research into influencer culture and what it's like to be an influencer?

Natasha: I did a little bit. It is pretty hard because I think all of them have quite different experiences and how they're perceived and how people react to them. So I didn't want to do too much research. I wanted to be sort of quite organically just writing and then building how I see them. Do you do that? I should really research it, then I get stuck in this "I've researched too much" and it stops being my character. I try to make them something that they never were, if that makes any sense at all.

Mindy: Yes, it does. It makes perfect sense. Absolutely possible to over-research. You could almost get stuck in it, I think, cause you worry so much about getting it right. I write YA as well. But I have an adult book that I would love to get out one day, we'll see. I still have to work on it. But it is set in 1916 during the Spanish influenza. And I was writing a scene... It's set in the US, like in a rural area in a one-room school house. And I was writing a scene where the teacher... 'cause the Spanish flu could drop you very quickly. Your symptoms could just come on and you could become very violently sick and die within hours. The teacher very suddenly - she feels herself getting sick. She knows something's wrong, and so she doesn't want her students to get sick. She runs out of the building as fast as she can, and she's disoriented. She's ill. She also trips and falls, and she rolls down the steps and the kids come out and they're like, "Oh my gosh. What do we do? Should we even touch her?" And in my mind, her shoe had come off, and her shoe was sitting on one of the steps. But would her shoe have come off? What would her shoe have been in 1916.

So I go and I start researching women's footwear in 1916, but it couldn't be like high fashion. It had to be what a middle class rural woman would have been wearing in 1916. So I'm trying to figure all of that out. Eventually I decide no, her shoe probably would not have come off because it would have been a boot, And it would have been the kind that you literally use a crochet hook to finish tying, and it's like "no her boot is not coming off." I mean, I probably did two to three hours of research to figure out if her boot came off. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if her boot came off or not, number one. And number two, a reader probably isn't gonna notice or care, and I literally dropped everything and did not write for three hours 'cause I needed to know if her boot came off. And that is an example of caring a little too much.

Natasha: Yeah. Exactly. Exactly. And it's so easy to get pulled into that.

Mindy: It really is. Have you ever had that one thing that you just felt like you had to chase down and then you were like, "Okay. That was not worth it."

Natasha: Oh yeah. So, it was when I was writing The Cellar, and he weights bodies, chucks them in the river, and disposes of them. And I'm googling this for a very long time - getting a little worried that someone was gonna see what I'm doing, and I spent hours, "what weight do you need to make sure that they don't come back up?" And I think, "You know what. I could just write, 'He's weighted the body.' They don't need to know exactly."

Mindy: No, you don't. You're right. But that's exactly the kind of thing that will happen to you. That you just end up going down that rabbit hole of wanting to make sure that you're right, and essentially it doesn't actually matter. You're talking about the things that you Google, and then you have to worry a little bit. As a writer, we do end up looking at some things or wandering into parts of the internet or information that we might not necessarily want to be associated with. I can tell you that my ads that I get or on Amazon, when it's like "based on your recent search history you might be interested in... " and it's like, "No. I don't need that bondage material thing." Have you ever researched something like the weighting of the bodies and just been like, "Oh man. I am a little concerned now about my search history." Or also just... "Gosh, I wouldn't want anyone to stumble across this in my browser."

Natasha: Definitely. So when I was writing You Will Be Mine, the killer cuts out hearts. So, I'm googling "how you get to the heart." You ought to get through the rib cage and how you would cut it out. That was interesting.

Mindy: I have definitely searched some things that have skewed my ads. I actually have a friend who writes tech thrillers, and she needed to know how to get a bomb onto a plane. So she just Googled it and tried to figure out how to get a bomb onto a plane. She lived in California, and her husband was a TV producer. He also lived in California, but because of their work, they were at different parts of the state. One of them would fly to the other one every other week. She went to go see her husband, and she had been put on the no-fly list.

Natasha: No. Oh my gosh.

Mindy: Yeah, she couldn't get on the plane. She had a friend in Homeland Security, and she talked to them eventually. And they were like, "Yeah, dude. I can tell you exactly why you are not allowed to fly on planes anymore."

Natasha: Oh no! Did she get off the list though? Is she okay now?

Mindy: She did. She did, but without her friend inside the system to vouch for her who knows how that would have gone? But you gotta be a little bit careful.

Natasha: You do. Yeah, you have to be careful.

Mindy: So, tell me about what you are doing for The Island and press. Obviously, you're doing interviews and you're doing podcasts like this. Post covid... Are you doing much traveling?

Natasha: I haven't very much at all. I would like next year to come back to America. I've been a couple of times. Barnes & Noble events have been so much fun. So this time around, I'm doing an online with Barnes & Noble. Which will be really fun, but it's nice to go to in person, I think.

Mindy: Definitely. I miss being in-person a lot. I have a release in March, and this will be the first time since 2020 that I have done much in terms of actually doing a string of events or tour. I had a book come out in March of 2020, and we shut down over here... Third week of March in 2020 was when the lockdown started. I was touring with two other writers, and we had, I think, five cities right in the middle of March and at our first event, we had people. It was cool. At our second event, we had about half the crowd. At our third event, I think we had four people, and everyone was wearing masks. And at our last event that we showed up to... The book sellers, they were very kind, but they got a hold of us and they were like, "We're closing. There's not gonna be anybody here. Please come, and sign stock. Wear a mask, and go back home." We were like, "Okay." And then as soon as I got home from that tour was when we went on lock down.

Natasha: A similar thing over here. Everything just stopped didn't it? And it's still not picked back up, I don't think. There's still a lot more happening virtually.

Mindy: Yeah, there has been a lot more virtual events and trying to make things work online and doing zooms and Instagram Live. So, is that something that you have found success with? Do you enjoy doing the online stuff?

Natasha: Yeah, I do. It's still nice to connect with people and booksellers and readers. It's just not quite the same as being able to physically see them and you get to take pictures with people and sign a book for them in front of them.

Mindy: Yeah. I agree. I get energy from other people. That's where my energy comes from... Is from drawing off of others. And when I can get them excited, then they're feeding me back, and we just get a nice little feedback loop. And there is so much about that that is organic, but there's also... There's a real presence that is necessary in order to make that happen. I don't know. I feel like it's hard to get that same feeling and to build that same energy when you're doing it virtually.

Natasha: Yeah, when you're just on your own, it's not the same.

Mindy: Yeah. It's really hard to generate excitement for yourself. Well, and speaking of that, generating excitement for yourself... How was it for you writing over covid? I know a lot of writers struggled with being on shutdown, first of all just emotionally and mentally, but also just being creative and finding ways to write or things to write about. Suddenly we had all the time in the world, but we needed to have the drive.

Natasha: Yeah, no, actually, I was great during lock down. I mean, I had my children at home which I had to home school. So that was a little bit of a battle, but... No, it was great. I would get up at six. I would probably write a couple thousand words, and then the children would get up. I was on it. That hasn't happened since... It ended.

Mindy: So, is that your typical approach? Do you have a word count for the day that you like to hit?

Natasha: Yeah. Typically, I try to... 1500-2000 words, and I'm generally happy with that.

Mindy: I always say minimum 1000. If I can get two, that's amazing. 15 is a nice, nice little bonus. Do you write every day then?

Natasha: Every weekday usually. On the weekends I keep my children at home, so... Yeah, every weekday... Go drop them off and come home and just sit in front of the computer until I'm happy with my word count.

Mindy: Yeah, and that's something that a lot of newer writers or writers that are trying to finish their first book talk to me about. Tips and tricks. They're like, "How do you write a book?" And I'm like, "Well, unfortunately, the only answer is you have to sit down and do it."

Natasha: Yeah. You have to be quite disciplined 'cause when you are just at home, there's so many things you could do. You need to make yourself have that time.

Mindy: Yes. And writing is hard. I will do anything other than write.

Natasha: That's exactly what I do. I'll check social media, and I'll do some other things. And I tell myself I'm being productive by doing different posts here and there and answering emails, but it's really just putting off starting writing.

Mindy: That is exactly accurate. Yes. I have been working really hard for three hours, and it's like, No, you haven't... Actually you haven't done anything. So speaking of social media then... What has your experience been like with social media kind of changing? 'Cause you came out right around the same time that I did. The Cellar was published in 2014. My first book came out in 2013, and when we were first out in the world and publishing, social media was very text-based. It was tweets. It was Facebook posts. And then Instagram came along, and it was pictures. But now suddenly, it's videos, and it's music. And it's whatever the trends are. It's just more time consuming than I'm willing to put into now. It's like, I can have a thought, and I can have a one-off. And I could tweet that 10 years ago, and that was good. And people were like, Yes. And they would interact with that. And it's like, now I have to make a video, and I have to be using the right filter, and I have to have whatever song is popular right now. And for me, I've just kind of stepped back from that a little bit because like we were just saying, I can get too sucked into that and put a lot of time into it when I should be writing.

Natasha: I completely agree. My heart is still in 2014 where you could just pop a post up every couple of days, and that was great.

Mindy: Yep.

Natasha: It's a lot of work now. It's more interactive, I think, and I do like that. But you can spend hours where you used to just spend a few minutes, and it does take away from your actual writing time.

Mindy: I agree. I feel too that things are more crowded. I was on TikTok for about five minutes. I have an account there, but I very rarely post because I would put together something, and it took me so long to put it together, and then I would put it out there. And it's like if the algorithm doesn't basically choose you, you're not going to get a lot of reach with that. And it's like, man... And granted... Learning curve. I didn't really know what I was doing, and so it took longer. But I would just be like, "Oh my gosh. I just spent an hour making this 15-second video, and 40 people saw it." I say that as someone that definitely has not figured out how to use TikTok. I will say this though. The nice thing about TikTok and booktok... The readers are the ones that are generating the content. There's not so much responsibility on us to generate it. If they can do it, that's great.

Natasha: I mean, if someone out there just wants to do all that for my books, that would be fantastic.

Mindy: No, I agree. Whenever anybody is like, "Oh my gosh. I read your book, and I loved it." I'm like, "Cool. Are you on TikTok?" Last thing, why don't you let listeners know where they can find The Island when it comes out on February 28th, and where they can find you online.

Natasha: The Island is to be in stores in America. So, it will be in Barnes & Noble for sure. Everywhere else, it's going to be online. So yeah, it's where you can get The Island. And you can find me on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook. All of them. Just Author Natasha Preston.

Mindy:     Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Bethany C. Morrow on the Social Horror Genre & The Importance of Nuance In Audiobooks

Mindy: Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Bethany C. Morrow, author of Cherish Farrah, which is available now. I am so excited about this book. I just got my review copy in the mail last week, it is part of what is coming to be called The Social horror genre. So if you'd like to explain what that means, and then just tell us a little bit about Cherish Farrah.

Bethany: Social horror is a genre of horror that deals specifically with the sociological contexts in which we find ourselves, so it's a horror that is very much based on existing tensions and dynamics within our society. The one that everyone is probably most familiar with, of course, is Get Out. What I love about social horror is, in order to appreciate, partake or anything, you have to let go of this delusion, this gas lighting that we are so accustomed to in the United States. Which is that a person, particularly a racially marginalized person can say, This is my reality, this is what's happening, this is what's being done to me - and then other people can say, Well, I don't know if that's true. It further dehumanizes you by acting like it's up for discussion. And in order to engage with or even be entertained by social horror, you don't get to do that. You have to come fully prepared to deal with the reality of our society in order to take part in it. So Cherish Farrah. is about a 17-year-old. I wanna say right off the bat, this is not young adult. Having a teenage protagonist does not make it a young adult novel, which you will find very quickly as you're reading this book. 

And she is very troubled, we are almost claustrophobically close to her, she's our POV character, and so we are privy to everything that's going on, interiority. Everything is sort of being interpreted by her, which is a very unsettling experience, the more you get to know Farrah. And she has a budding psychopathy, she also has a best friend who is the only other Black girl in their country club community, but her best friend Cherish is being raised by and has been adopted by a white progressive couple. And so Cherish is something that Farrah calls, WGS or White Girl Spoiled, and it's actually a very sociologically complex concept, despite the fact that it sounds almost playful, like a term of endearment. But it really is a name that Farrah has put to the kind of void that she sees in Cherish’s understanding and really just at the core of Cherish, because she has this family and this experience that is in total contrast to the reality of the rest of society. The rest of the country actually, and because of it, she is coddled the way that a White child might be, but not being white and therefore not having the sort of social political capital that comes with that, it simply creates deficits as far as Farrah is concerned. And it definitely gives her a foot in to sort of take hold of Cherish and be extremely important to Cherish.

Mindy: So many things going on with this book. You do a wonderful job of pulling the reader in, and I am so interested in the tight POV that you talk about. And also as Farrah having this budding psychopathy as you were saying, and this mask that she wears. I think it's super interesting. One of the things that I think is particularly nuanced about your writing in particular, but also in the social horror genre, if you have a white reader that is not perhaps familiar with the internality of what it is like to not be white, I think that is so revealing for the reader, and it gives you so much of an opportunity to impact your year.

Bethany: It's such a naturally enticing and challenging gene, and that's what I love about it, because as I said, you know me pretty well, so you know that I don't buy the bumbling bigot act. I don't buy the complete un awareness, because we are actually raised in the same country, we do have the same media, we have pockets and different things where of course you could hide out. But that would be intentional, you have to intentionally hide out in those places, and any time you're doing something intentionally, you know why you're doing it, even if you're unwilling to verbalize it. And so what I find really interesting about putting someone in such a claustrophobic situation is it challenges the really one-dimensionality that white supremacy imposes on pretty much everyone else. At the beginning of the book and Cherish and Farrah are eavesdropping on their mothers having a conversation, and Farrah’s mother is actually trying to warn Cherish’s mother. She’s actually trying to confess that she has concerns about Farrah and Brianne Whitman, which is the white mother, Cherish’s mom does not hear it as the warning that it is. We have these pendulum swings and it's either like, all black girls are villains or infants, and so Brianne Whitman, in her progressive-ness has gone all the way over to victims, infants. 

And you realize immediately how dehumanizing that is regardless of whether you think it's a good stereotype or not, or a beneficial stereotype or not. It's not, because you're dehumanizing people to the point that you can't see them clearly, or you're refusing to see them clearly when you're dealing with somebody like Farrah. What are the possible consequences of that? Using such a tight and close POV, and it being social horror and dealing with the public that I don't actually believe is as bumbling and unaware as they pretend - at least not of themselves - and why they are doing what they're doing? Why they feel so comfortable in these lily white communities? I don't think that it's gonna be hard for people to understand that something is wrong with Farrah, and to pick up on the nuance of Farrah, in order to even decide she's unreliable. But as I say, all narrators are unreliable. Any human is unreliable. It doesn't mean that they mean to be, but they are. And the question is, Is it malicious? Are they dangerously unreliable? Who is the safe person to trust, not because they're reliable, but because they don't mean you any harm? And you have to make those kinds of decisions because all of the information you're getting is through Farrah, is through the lens of how she sees the world, and you'll be there with her in an interaction and then you'll hear how she's interpreting it. Do you believe her? Is she still the safest person to believe in this scenario?

Mindy: Absolutely, I love that approach. You're so right, any time you're in a POV, you're experiencing the world through that person. Since we all have our own lens, everything that we carry with us that we've been taught or how we experience the world is part of interpreting our moments. So it's all going through that funnel, the character is then relating it to the reader, the reader doesn't have access to how a funnel was created, so they don't know. That's a wonderful point. I love it so much. 

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Mindy: I also wanted to bring up Such A Fun Age by Kiley Reid.

Bethany: It's been brought up a couple of times today, and I need this book.

Mindy: It is so good, I enjoyed it so much. I highly recommend the audio, the audio is amazing because the performer does such a wonderful job of even the way that the words are spoken and the nuance of how the characters are even processing their internal thoughts is different for the white narrator versus the Black narrator. It was a wonderful book. I enjoyed it so much, and it goes back to what you were saying about that POV, because you have both characters experiencing the same situation, and one of them is through a white lens and one of them is through a black lens, and it changes everything.

Bethany: Right, I just had to look it up to see who reads the audio because of course, as a fellow author, I know how important the audio book is and how important the talent is, and it's Nicole Lewis. I'm really looking forward to listening to this, the audio book for Cherish Farrah is performed by Angel Pean. And I was really serious about being involved in that process because from an accessibility point of view, and also just the way that people sometimes choose to read, there are certain people for whom the audio book is their only experience of this book. I want to make sure that they are reading the same book that I wrote. 

It was really wonderful to really talk with not just Angel, but also with the director Barbara about it. Barbara had very obviously read very closely. I really appreciated all of her direction and stuff, but when you're talking to somebody about what's gonna make or break the audio book for a book like this, it is absolutely the fact that, yes, it's all narrated by Farrah, but some of it is happening outside of your head and some of it's happening inside of her head. And if you don't understand how strategic she is, you might make the mistake of having a pretty consistent performance, and that's not the case with Farrah, because so much of what she's doing is based on who she's talking to and what she's trying to get out of the interaction. Listening to Angel in the same scene, be talking to Cherish as Farrah and then be talking to the reader as Farrah and just lose any sort of joviality in her voice or any sort of lightness in her tone, I was like, Oh, okay. She's nailing it.

Mindy: It's so important, isn't it? I love what you're saying about audio books and being involved and knowing even the narrators that are working in the aren. As a consumer, I definitely have some preferences about what I like, whose performances I like. Do the male narrators just pitch their voice high when they're doing women or do they actually perform? And the same for female narrators when they're doing male characters. I wanna see an actual performance. So as a consumer, I have preferences. When it comes to being a creator, because it is a performance and the nuances are so important, and like with Cherish Farrah , that is even more important and... Yes, you wanna be involved. It literally changed the book, if it's not done right.

Bethany: Exactly. 

Mindy: It is a step removed from the medium that you delivered it in, and so someone interpreting it. 

Bethany: Right, and the thing is that they don't necessarily mean it that way, because they mean it to be, okay, you've got your hard cover and you've got your audio book and you can choose between them... Well, any time you have more people involved in the process of presenting it, of course, there's gonna be some interpretation. And anybody who's had any audio books where they weren't involved, you don't even think of all the ways that something can be implied in the delivery and completely change the tone of the scene, completely change the meaning of the sentence. You don't think about it until you hear it done and go, Oh, I wouldn't have even known to flag that. I didn't even think about all the different ways that a person could say that. It was really important with this book, just from the onset, this being my fifth novel, and my fifth audiobook, I knew that this book, you would not get the same story if I wasn't involved, if I didn't have a chance to hear and give feedback and talk to them about the characters and about the dynamics. I was really concerned, and I want people to have faith that when they listen to the audio book, they're getting the book that I wrote.

Mindy: Yes, it's so important. It's critical. It is similar in ways to having your book turn into a film because it's being filtered through others.

Bethany: In that case, you expect that this is an adaptation. Movies, those are adaptations. An audio book is not considered an adaptation, it's considered a book. I know that adaptations are completely different animals. I'm always interested to see the decisions they make, because if you try to just make a book into a TV show or into a movie, it doesn't work. These are completely different mediums, their strengths are different, the storytelling tools that you have are completely different. There's usually one thing you have to get right, it depends on the book, but there's usually one thing you have to get right, sometimes it's the world, sometimes it's the theme, sometimes it's the main character. If you really secure that you're gonna do right by the original work. But an audio book, the reason it’s so jarring when it doesn't match up is because it's not considered an adaptation, so you're expecting it to match up.

Mindy: Yep, yep, I agree. And you were talking about not even knowing to flag something as the author, and how you'll hear a certain line delivered and be like, Oh, oh no, that is not what I said, even though they're the same words. And I think it is really interesting because I have experienced that just as a person moving through the world, I certainly don't think of myself as a nice person. I always tell people I'm kind, I'm not nice. I’m not going to be unnecessarily flattering to you, right? You fall and I will help you up, I will certainly never push you, but I'm not gonna say nice things to you and watch you cry and bring you a Band Aid. I'm gonna get your ass up, we're gonna keep moving. So it's like, this is just kind of how I operate and none of my intentions are ever cruel. And I know this because I know my internality. As a child and then later growing up and being in junior high and high school, and people will be like, Oh yeah, I would not fuck with you, you are rough around the edges or whatever, and I'm always like…. But I'm not.

Bethany: Right, I... Listen, we are very, very similar in this way, and I think it's probably why we hit it off immediately in our first meeting. Because everything that you're saying right now... I'm like same. Yes, yes.

Mindy: Exactly. Yes, and then of course, today in the world where we all have cameras and phones and video recorders in our pockets, it's like I will re-watch me on a panel or even a conversation that I'm having with someone else with friends or something, and someone’s gonna be like, Oh my gosh, let’s get this on video. And I'll watch it and I'll be like, Oh damn. That did sound bitchy.

Bethany: And it's because, again, as a student of Sociology, we are always responsible for the social contract. That agreed upon, and that doesn't mean everybody got a vote, but the agreed upon correct. The way to engage, and most of it has nothing to do with being genuine, with being honest, with being helpful. We err on the side of flattery before we err on the side of aid. We think that a feel good story is... We're gonna give 10 teachers a chance to crawl around on the floor for $100,000, and that's such a feel good story. Let's show this all over the media, and if you think about it... That's cruel. 

Mindy: Oh, it's demeaning. 

Bethany: That's terrible. You're telling me that you know that they don't have everything that they need, you're not gonna do anything on a policy level, you're not gonna push for any sort of change, you're gonna think that it's a good thing and it's a nice thing because you can make this moment of content, where somebody ends up getting something and then we're gonna focus on that one person to the exclusion of what is the reality of the situation? And I think people like you and I are more concerned with what's the reality? Not what’s actually nice. What's actually mean? What’s actually helpful? And so it's really difficult to always adhere to these little games that you know are sinister honestly, because they don't care about fixing anything, they don't care about helping anybody, they care about getting that feeling, getting a feel good for it. And just focus on that and not really look at what else is happening, and for some of us, we go - we can't do that.

Mindy: No, no. And in my interactions with other people, I just, I don't do fake, I won't do it. And so people ask me, How are you doing? I answer them. 

Bethany: Right, right. 

Mindy: Not I’m fine, I'm Okay. At one time when I still worked at the school, the superintendent’s secretary, she called me, I was at my desk and I answered the phone, and she's like, Hey, and she needed me for a couple of minutes, but she was like, Hey, what are you doing right now? And I'm like, I'm menstruating.

Bethany: Look, I just wanna be honest with you, and I wanna be transparent. I’m bleeding right now. That is what's up. 

Mindy: I am menstruating. When a person does that it throws everyone else. As you  are saying that social contract that we've all been trained up to, and then most of us operating within it for a very long time, and I'm just like... You know, I'm gonna step outside of this. And I'm just gonna be me. And I’m menstruating.

Bethany: It's not as useful as we pretend it is. It is absolutely oppressive, and intentionally oppressive. I think it's like grease for the wheel, it doesn't actually care about the health of the organism, it just wants to keep running. And one of the things about Cherish Farrah , here's a person who can pretend. How useful is this contract, if it can be faked? If you're not actually safe with this person just because they know the right thing to say?  And it doesn't mean that they will always adhere to it, they're choosing to adhere to it for a time, and of course... The thing about the book is - how many people are actually doing that?

Mindy: Yes, yes. So powerful. Well, I agree completely about that social contract being for the benefit of the system, but also... So superficial, my experience of it would be Thanksgiving dinner. Right now, I'm gonna talk about this, I'm upset and I have a problem with this, and I'm not gonna be like, Oh, the turkey wasn't dry this year.

Bethany: And that's where you get all those buzzwords and those reactionary insults that are meant to put you back in your place, you get words like divisive. Whomever is not allowing the system to function as it's functioning... You become the problem, if you talk about the problem, yes, because we've been trained to be like, Everything's fine, as long as I'm allowed to feel good regardless of reality, it doesn't matter what the reality is, and actually anybody who tells the truth and forces us to see that this is a fiction, that person is actually to blame.

Mindy: Yes, absolutely. And all of this then ties back into Cherish Farrah  and the mask that Farrah is operating with and how it slips, it starts to slip as the story evolves.

Bethany: There's an aspect of it where a little bit of it slips because she's sort of destabilized from losing control and people will try to read her sort of simplistically, which it will be a mistake, which is to say like, Is she envious, jealous of what Cherish has? No, she's not, she believes in control and she believes in ownership. So she is concerned with owning Cherish, she's not concerned with becoming Cherish, she's not concerned with anything other than continuing to be the most important and necessary person in Cherish’s life. And that maybe becomes stronger because she loses the control in her personal life because of her parents foreclosure She is entirely entirely about control. The thing is, I'm gonna say this and I still think it'll be difficult for people to ignore. Farrah is the story you think you're reading, until you know the story you're reading. And that means multiple things can be true at one time. She is exactly who she sounds like. Does that mean she's the only one in the know? Does that mean that she's the least reliable? If we accept that she's unreliable, does that make her the most unreliable? Is it possible for other people to simultaneously be unreliable? And it's one of the things that her mother is trying to get her to grasp, there are always multiple stories, multiple narratives being told.

Mindy: Last thing, why don't you let people know where they can find you online? And where they can find Cherish Farrah .

Bethany: You can find Cherish Farrah anywhere that books are sold. I do encourage people to also pick up the audio book, narrated by Angel Pean, and you can find me always on Twitter at BC-Morrow, that's BC, M-O-R-R-O-W, because that's where I live. And you can find me at the same handle on Instagram. I'm not as good at it. I don't know what to tell you. And my site is Bethany C. Morrow dot com. 

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