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Green Fairy: “Sol was only reading a news story about a college student who’d killed himself, but the student had been gay, so when the young wolf’s fur prickled with the feeling of someone watching staring at him, he hid the story behind the picture of a car at some local auto dealer’s website.”Ĭonfession: “Dear père, I know that this is not what you meant when you said you wanted all of Lutèce to speak my name.” I think the best way to make this example is to compare the opening sentences of Green Fairy and Confession. Gold adopts a rather stiff style for the Confession sections, a style that makes me question the skills of his fictional translator. This is key to the novel, as aspects of Confession start to intrude on Sol’s day-to-day life.Ĭonfession is introduced as a translation from a 1920s French novel. Sol is reading a book for a school assignment called Confession, and soon enough the chapters of Green Fairy switch between Sol’s life and sections of Confession itself: a book-within-a-book. That’s all good, but Gold runs into trouble with the structure of Green Fairy. Much of Sol’s experiences in Green Fairy are familiar to me, and Gold’s descriptions of school and sport life have a ring of truth. I’m furry, gay, and know my way around a sports field. In many ways, I’m a natural reader for Green Fairy. Sol has to contend with homophobic abuse and bullying in school, and pressure from his father at home. He’s a baseball player who has recently lost his starting place in the team, a move possibly precipitated by an embarrassing erection-in-the-shower incident. Roughly, the book follows the story of Sol: a young gay wolf simultaneously trying to manage competing pressures from his internet boyfriend, his father, and school life. It succeeds in its attempt to be a readable, enjoyable book but it fails in its aspirations to literature. Green Fairy mixes accessible ideas with higher pretensions: in some ways it’s a teenage coming-out story, in others it’s about the value of art itself. It doesn’t tell a straightforward story and it doesn’t include explicit sex scenes, as with many of Gold’s other works. It’s fair to say that Green Fairy is an ambitious work. (Disclosure: I’ve met Kyell, and we get along well.) I asked around on Twitter and got a strong recommendation for Green Fairy, by Kyell Gold 1. I figured the best place to start would be to read the best furry fiction available.
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If you enjoy writing, how do you decide whether to upload it for all-comers on SoFurry, or to publish it for sale? Successful authors will win a dedicated following, but the bulk will struggle to find a critical mass of fans. Their job feels a bit claustrophobic to me, writing as they are to a small but engaged audience – like a tiny version of the sci-fi readership – a tough demographic. I’m also slightly fascinated by those people who write furry books for a living. I found the best of them to be well-constructed and enjoyable, if a bit disposable. My interest has been piqued over the years by people writing about furry books, by furry writers in general, and by my exposure to a few furry short stories. I recently decided it was time for a rethink. When pressed, I say that I don’t read much furry fiction because I don’t think it’s going to be very good. I am, though, a furry and a keen reader, so I find myself attracted to furry writers and booksellers, furry books and reviews. To begin, an important caveat: I’m not a big reader of furry genre fiction.