Boylan family, summer 2010

A photo of the Boylans– Deedie (“Grace”), Zach, Sean, and JFB, down at the dock on Long Pond in front of our home in Belgrade Lakes, Maine.  That’s Ranger on the left and Indigo-dog on the right, as well.  ”This dream is short, but happy.”

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Geeks Guide to the Galaxy interviews JFB

Here’s a podcast hosted by two writers, John Joseph Adams & David Barr Kirtley.

Their copy runs:

Jennifer Finney Boylan, author of Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror, joins us this week on io9′s Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy podcast to talk about literal and metaphorical monsters, and growing up transgender.

Falcon Quinn book cover illustration by Brandon Dorman.

The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy is hosted by John Joseph Adams and David Barr Kirtley.

You can download the MP3 for this episode here, or subscribe to The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy podcast feed here.

Read on for this episode’s fabulous SHOW NOTES!

0:00 Introduction

Interview: Jennifer Finney Boylan

1:24 Interview begins

1:30 Playing Girl Planet as a child

2:38 Space Travel and Space Exploration as a National Obsession and a venue to allowing Boylan to explore herself as a child

3:28 A character in The Planets who secretly dresses up as a wizard

6:28 Was Boylan ever afraid of giving away her secrets when writing and publishing as a man?

9:27 Richard Russo’s character: Professor Phineas “Finny” Coomb

11:15 Being a character on Saturday Night Live

13:20 Having a powerful emotional reaction to The Fellowship of the Ring movie

16:18 Boylan’s contribution to It Gets Better

18:47 Boylan’s I’m Looking Through You, a memoir about growing up in a haunted house

21:40 Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror, Boylan’s most recent novel

25:32 What’s wrong with a Wereturtle?

27:29 The Halloween readings at Colby College with Professor Bassett

29:58 The strange anti-gravity stone on Colby College campus

31:46 The sequel to Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror and Boylan’s other future projects

33:31 End of interview

Dave and John talk about monsters

34:24 Wicked by Gregory McGuire and the difference between monsters and villains

35:54 Dave meets Gregory McGuire and the cast of the stage adaptation of Wicked

37:07 Incorporating music in novels and reading

38:08 The Lord of the Rings, sympathetic monsters and Senator Bilbo (Podcastle Episode 32, featuring Senator Bilbo by Andy Duncan)

40:05 Was The Lord of the Rings unfair to the Orcs?

41:01 Phantasie for the PC

42:22 Throne of Bones by Brian McNaughton

42:57 Orcs by Stan Nicholls

44:15 Dungeon Keeper

45:17 Mail Order Monsters

45:51 Inspired by a quote, Dave creates a monster creation simulator and the limits of human creativity and imagination

48:55 Dave has a pop-quiz for John! This time: the Monsters of Dungeons & Dragons

58:49 Hoard

59:23 Want some sympathetic monsters? Monsters Inc. delivers.

59:58 John Milton’s Paradise Lost and the allure of a villainous character

1:03:00 We are the orcs

1:03:38 Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein

1:07:25 Author-preferred editions of novels

1:08:49 My Demon Lover

1:09:55 John’s review of Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror

1:10:22 The Tiptree Award

1:14:21 Show wrap-up

Thanks for listening!

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Magic Eight Ball Reveals the Future

I spent this New Year’s Eve safely at home, hunkered down with the family and a couple of friends.   I’ve done New Years in a variety of venues—on a rooftop in Manhattan, in the streets of Cork, Ireland—but home is best.  At home, at the very least, you can be certain that no one is going to sneak up behind you and blow a party horn.  Or if they do, you know that you have the ability to send them to their rooms without dessert.

My children are the only ones who are truly excited by New Years, for the very good reason that they usually can’t stay up that late and see what a dud the whole enterprise turns out to be.  I think that below a certain age, you actually expect to be able to feel something change at midnight on December 31st.

I remember this feeling from my own deplorable youth. On New Year’s Eve 1966-67 I was lying on my back in what we called the “kangaroo pouch” of my father’s 1963 Volkswagen beetle, a car that I would probably still be driving today had I not thoughtlessly steered it off of a cliff on the first day of my senior year of high school eleven years later.

I had liked 1966, which was the year I turned eight. I’d spent much of the year launching Estes rockets and exploring the pine forest behind our house.  Eight was good. Still, I already had the feeling that something was wrong with me, something huge that was already sweeping in over the horizon like a great black cloud.  I had the feeling that in 1967 things would get worse, and as it turns out, I was right.

Still, I remember lying there on my back in the kangaroo pouch, staring through the oval window toward the sky.  Our family—my parents, my sister, and me—had spent New Years with some friends, the Whites, and it was the first time I’d been allowed to stay up past midnight.  I was certain that some fundamental law of the universe was going to change at twelve. I was young enough not only to believe that this was true, but to think that it would be something worth blowing a party horn about.

Bill White and his wife Ginny owned a bulldog named Percy, a dog that threw up pretty much whenever it wanted.  I spent much of the evening at the side of Percy the bulldog and playing with a Magic Eight Ball.  The adults saw fit to give me alcohol for the first time in my life, a small glass of a dark green cordial they called Crème de Menthe.  It burned.

The Whites had something called a rumpus room, which had a bar actually built into one wall, and a candlestick telephone.  I sat with Percy on the couch and watched the rumpus.  Mr. White told jokes about Italians.  My parents talked about the war.  Our neighbors’ son, Bob Pinkney Jr., was flying a Huey over North Vietnam.  His father, Bob Pinkney Sr., who worked for Boeing, and who had helped to design the Huey, had changed in the last six months.  Since his son went to Vietnam, his hair had turned almost completely grey.

I asked the Magic Eight ball if Bob Pinkney, Jr. would die in Vietnam.  The answer came floating out of the blackish blue murk:  Better not tell you now.  I asked if the dark cloud I felt coming for me was going to go away.  Reply hazy, try again.  Was 1967 going to be a good year—for the country, for my family, for me? Don’t count on it.

Percy, sitting next to me on the couch, thought this all over, then barfed on the courderoy pants I’d gotten for Christmas.

At midnight, I blew a party horn and yelled and cried and hugged my mother.

Then I was in the back of the Volkswagen, looking up at the stars.

I thought I saw something in the sky that night, an undulating white cloud that hovered and changed shape like an angel.  At the time I remember thinking, it’s the ghost of 1966, vanishing like steam in the dark night of the new year.

Now I wonder if it actually was an angel, some spirit of infinite good will sent to counter whatever dark clouds stretch our their hands to snatch us.  And if it was an angel, it surely wasn’t there just to watch over me.  That angel was there looking out for lots of people, including Bob Pinkney Jr., who did come home alive from Vietnam, changed forever, but alive.

Magic eight ball, will we ever understand the mysteries of our lives, the heartbreaking and joyful miracles of time?

Reply hazy, try again.

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“You guys look different too..” From the Main Line Times: JFB goes home again.

A piece from the suburban Philadelphia paper on my return to my old high school in December.  Very nicely done.

HAVERFORD SCHOOL GRADUATE RETURNS TO TELL HER STORY.

By Cheryl Allison

You guys look different, too,” a speaker at the Haverford School told teachers and classmates in the audience, to break the ice.

Admittedly, though, Jenny Boylan, Class of ’76, has gone through a transformation well beyond aging.

Boylan, who attended the private all-boys school from eighth grade through graduation, did so as James Boylan. A professor of creative writing and American literature at Colby College in Maine since 1988, she is also a transgender woman, who made the physical transition in her early 40s.

Her first return to Haverford in more than three decades last Friday morning to talk with the school’s Diversity Alliance and speak to the Upper School coincidentally comes as Lower Merion Township and several other local municipalities, including Radnor and Haverford townships, are considering adopting anti-discrimination ordinances.

Lower Merion, the first of the group, was set to hold a public hearing and vote Dec. 8 on its ordinance, which would prohibit discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations based on sexual orientation or gender identity or expression.

After three versions, the legislation, whose drafting has had the unanimous support of Lower Merion’s board of commissioners, was expected to be enacted.

Boylan, whose 2003 memoir “She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders” was a national bestseller, is a Valley Forge native who grew up in Newtown Square and Devon. Realizing that your gender is not the same as that of the body you have been born into “is hard. It’s not something I would wish on anyone,” she told students. But Boylan, who was not open about her situation then, added, “One of the things that made it less hard was this place,” in the friends she made and in the teachers who encouraged a love of literature and writing.

Boylan said she wanted to…(click here for the rest of the story)

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The Library at Pooh Corner: JFB op/ed for the New York Times

This piece ran on the op/ed page of the Times on Dec. 22, 2010.

The Library at Pooh Corner

by Jennifer Finney Boylan

BELGRADE LAKES, ME

EIGHTY-FIVE years ago this Christmas Eve, The London Evening News published a short story about a boy and a bear written by an assistant editor at Punch named A. A. Milne, thus engendering four children’s books, a slew of films and videos and a merchandising empire estimated to be worth more to the Disney Corporation than Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy and Pluto combined.

(Not to mention providing the inspiration for Dorothy Parker’s most withering review, when she responded, in her Constant Reader column, to Pooh’s line that “pom” makes singing more “hummy” with the comment, “And it is that word ‘hummy,’ my darlings, that marks the first place … at which Tonstant Weeder Fwowed up.”)

It also resulted in my finding myself in tears last Christmas in the Stephen A. Schwarzman building of the New York City Public Library.

The story goes back 35 years. In the 1980s, I had a gruesome copy-editing job at E. P. Dutton, the American publishers of the “Winnie-the-Pooh” books. One of my colleagues was a crusty septuagenarian named Elliot Graham, whose title was director of publicity emeritus. Elliot was the shepherd of the original Pooh stuffed animals — Pooh, Tigger, Kanga, Piglet and Eeyore — which were kept in a glass case in the Dutton lobby on 2 Park Avenue.

He’d take them to schools and literary festivals and the sets of early morning news shows. We used to talk about the Pooh animals together, Elliot and I, as if they were members of a rock band, and Elliot their long-suffering manager.

When Dutton was sold in 1985, the Pooh animals became…(click here for the rest of the piece)

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from the Philadephia Inquirer: JB Goes Home

Posted on Thu, Dec. 9, 2010

by Diana Marder

Jennifer Finney Boylan is at ease now in the living room of the Devon home where she spent her boyhood.

She has not always been comfortable in this place.

When she lived here as 13-year-old James Richard Boylan Jr. and had the whole top floor to herself, she did her homework with the dead bolt on the bedroom door, wearing the bra and sweater she kept hidden behind the room’s faux wood paneling, and trusting she’d hear the stairs creak if anyone approached.

Now a professor of creative writing at Maine’s Colby College since 1988, Boylan, 52, is a visiting prof this semester at Ursinus in Collegeville. Staying in Devon has allowed Boylan cherished time with her mother, while driving to Maine once a month to be with sons Zach, 16, and Sean, 14, and her wife, Deirdre Grace.

Their 1988 marriage weathered Boylan’s 2002 sexual reassignment surgery and they are together still as loving, if not entirely intimate, partners.

Jenny Boylan is a tall, slender blonde who often gets hit on by men heedless of her wedding ring. And she is happily married, buoyed by the pleasures of parenting, teaching, and writing.

Her groundbreaking memoir, She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders (Broadway Books, 2003), was the first best-seller by a transgender American.

It landed her on Larry King Live twice, a Barbara Walters special, the Today show, the History Channel, CBS’s 48 Hours, and Oprah Winfrey (four times). She played herself in two episodes of All My Children, and Will Forte played her for a skit on Saturday Night Live.

She got, still gets, tons of letters. Some from… (read the rest of the story in the INQUIRER here.)

Read more: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20101209_Transgender_writer_Jennifer_Finney_Boylan_comes_home_to_Philadelphia_area.html#ixzz17eAt70XH
Watch sports videos you won’t find anywhere else

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Rock and Roll High School: Jenny Boylan Goes Home Again

About a month ago, the Headmaster of my old high school called me and asked if I’d speak there.

It’s probably worth noting that my alma mater, The Haverford School, was then and is now an all-boys school.  It was not known, in the 1970s, for being particularly compassionate toward those in the culture who are different.

And so, when the Headmaster, Joe Cox, asked me to speak at Haverford, I was cautious.  I thought– okay, what about this does NOT sound like the kind of dream you’d wake up from, screaming?  You’re back at the podium of that school, after your sex change.  Before you is a room full of creatures like the ones you knew back in the day.  Oh, and by the way:  did I mention that in this dream, you’re also horribly old?

I thought about all this for about five seconds, and then I said to the Headmaster: Sure, why not?

Why would I agree to such a thing?  Well, because in addition to all of the above–which is no small amount of baggage, to be sure– I also have tremendously warm memories of that school as well.  The teachers– many of them, anyhow–were amazing.  And the friends that I made then I have kept.  It’s fair to say that I liked school–as much as anyone does–that I loved all that reading and the care of the teachers and the comraderie of my ne’er-do-well partners-in-crime. So why would I not want to go back and see what the place has turned into? Surely I, of all people, ought to admit that all sorts of things are capable of surprising changes.

Still, when I woke up yesterday morning, in my old high school bedroom (I’m living back in this area for the fall, taking care of my mom) my very first thought, was the very same one I had forty years ago, in that very same room, first thing in the morning.  Oh shit, I’ve got to get ready for school.

My old English teacher, Robert Ulysses Jameson, about 1971. His nickname was "Chopper."

I admit I was kind of freaked out as I headed over there, following the same route I used to drive to school every morning from 1970-1976. I passed all the old landmarks:  there was the place my sister went to school.  Over here was the place where I’d totalled my car on the first day of my senior year.  I was thinking, why did I agree to this?  Is it that I just can’t say no?  Or is it that even now, I am still seeking some sort of approval?  That I crave standing up and speaking my truth out loud in these hallways, even if that truth is being spoken about 40 years too late?

I parked my car and headed over to the Headmasters office.

As the Headmaster ushered me in to my first meeting with students, I found something else that had changed:  the meeting was with something called the Diversity Council.  There was a group of students of color, students from around the world.  No one outed themselves, but would I have been stunned and shocked if anyone had?  I would not.  They were this remarkable group of boys: articulate, respectful, curious, full of sparks.  At the end of my forty minute meeting with them I thought, pardoning the expression, Holy Cow, man.  This is not your father’s Haverford School.

Then I was ushered into a Sixth Form English classroom.  It’s worth saying that Sixth Form English was just about my favorite thing on earth, back in the day. And some of the boys were sitting in their desks just like I used to– leaning back in my chair, my long legs way out in front of me, tie askew.  I remembered being in Mr. Hallowell’s class, back in 1975, and listening as he opened the gate to the works of poets that changed the way I saw the world:  Keats.  Blake.  Coleridge.  Eliot.  I still have the textbook Hallowell used, “The Major Poets.”  I have carried it with me to every home I’ve ever lived in, have taken it with me in my backpack and suitcase around the world.

The boys in that class had read my books. Carefully.  They were full of questions:  curious, skeptical (in the best possible way), interested.

Next stop: coffee and pastry with–ta-da– my old teachers.  Four of them still work there.  One of them had the ROLL BOOK FROM 9TH GRADE BIO, 1972.  He showed me the long line of grades for BOYLAN, JAMES:  85, 72, 60, 29, 75, etc.  I thought, I got a 29 on a quiz?  Seriously?  My final grade for the year:  79.  A C+. I said to my old Bio teacher, “I’m so embarassed. A C plus!”  He replied, merrily, “Jenny, remember that in 1972, a C+ was “above average.”

And finally, it was on to the theatre, where all the boys lined in to listen to me speak.  Was I jumpy?  I was when I started.  I thought, this is just like that dream– I’m back in my old school.  I was crazy to do this.  And then I was introduced, and i strolled across the stage, and I started to talk.

After that, I read the piece from the new IT GETS BETTER anthology, coming out in March from Penguin. And then it was Q and A time– and the boys peppered me with good questions.  Which I fielded, tried to answer as best I could.

When it was all over, the following thing happened:  the boys LEAPED to their feet, all 300+ of them, and cheered like I was Elvis.  It was one of the most astonishing moments of my life.  In all the many ways I had imagined this morning might conclude, this was never one of the scenarios.

Then the Headmaster came out on stage and gave me a medal.  Or a coin, I don’t know what to call it– but it has the school’s shield, along with the words: Honor. Integrity. Courage.

It took me exactly no time at all to speak into the microphone in the voice of the Cowardly Lion:  Look what my medal says. Courage!  Ain’t it the truth? Ain’t it the truth!

We adjourned for lunch with my old teachers, a few old classmates.

As I sat there with my old friends and teachers, I thought, with amazement, how the world is full of wonders.  Full of unexpected transformations.  Not only my own, but even in places like this.  We have all come so far.  I thought of those remarkable young men from the Diversity Council I’d met that morning, and smiled.   I thought of that Paul Simon song: I believe in the future, we will suffer no more.  Maybe not in my lifetime, but in yours I feel sure.

After which, I was left to wander around the old school, alone with my thoughts.  As I walked around the place, listening to the sounds of teachers teaching, musicians practicing,  I suddenly heard a set of footsteps behind me, running down the hall, moving further and further away.  Someone was late for something.

I turned around.  But there was no one there.

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Jenny Boylan on What Monsters Can Teach Us

Jennifer Boylan (English) and sons Zach, left, and Sean, who served as“consultants” for Boylan’s new novel, Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror

By Sarah Braunstein

Photos by: Heather Perry ’93

Colby English Professor Jennifer Boylan isn’t afraid of ghosts. Or monsters. Or, for that matter, metaphors. When it comes down to it, Boylan doesn’t seem afraid of much at all—and she has written a bold new book asking young readers (and adults, for that matter) to think again about the scary things in their own lives.

In Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror, Boylan takes us on a wild ride, daring readers to share an adventure story, explore the possibilities of identity, and figure out just what it means to “be yourself.”

At 13 we all feel like monsters. Our bodies and voices aren’t our own. Our parents have become strangers. We’re forced to decode a new and complex social order. Adolescence is brutal—for Falcon Quinn, it’s doubly challenging. One day this plucky, kind-hearted kid from Cold River, Maine, boards what appears to be a regular school bus and is shuttled at harrowing speed to a supernatural boarding school on a mysterious island. There he is greeted by Mrs. Redflint, a no-nonsense administrator who happens to breathe fire. Contrary to what he’s always believed, Falcon is not human, Mrs. Redflint announces.

Welcome, friends, to the Academy for Monsters. (Click here for the full story)

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JB in Chicago this week!

Greetings culture lovers, as Bullwinkle used to say. Two events for me this coming week in Chicago represent my first appearances in the Midwest in what seems like a long time. First stop is a workshop event Friday at the Belic Institute of Columbia College Chicago, starting at 10 AM. I’ll be reading from my new novel in progress (forthcoming from Random House in 2012) as well as other earlier work, and talking about craft. And on Sunday at 10 AM, I take the stage for the Chicago Humanities Festival, where I’ll be talking about She’s Not There and Falcon Quinn.

It’s a great treat for me to be able to make this visit to Chicago, and to do these two events, so I hope you’ll all turn out. Tune in next time for our next episode, Upsy-Daisium, or, Venn Ve Get Moose und Squirrel?

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School Library Journal: On Falcon Quinn, JB, and diversity issues for YA readers

The amazing Betsy Bird posted this truly sweet interview with me, about Falcon Quinn, on the School Library Journal blog today:

falconQuinnTitle
I don’t often host folks who’ve appeared on Oprah, Larry King, The Today Show, and a Barbara Walters Special (just to name a few).  Few of the authors I speak to in my interviews have been portrayed on Saturday Night Live by Will Forte.  And fewer still are on the judging committee of the Fulbright Scholars.  But that’s the thing about Jenny Boylan, you see.  She keeps you guessing.  You don’t know what she’s gonna do next.  Like, say, for example, write a middle grade novel about a boy who, at the onset of adolescence, discovers that he’s turning into a monster.  That’s the premise of Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirroron one level.  On another level you have a story within a story that I think a lot of kids are going to be able to identify with.  Ladies and gentlemen, it is my supreme honor to introduce to you the newest voice in the children’s literary sphere.  One, I assure you, that you have not encountered before.

Fuse #8: You are, to the best of my knowledge, the only transwoman to successfully publish a work of children’s fiction with a major publisher in the United States under her own name.  To say that you are groundbreaking is to put it mildly, and this is but one of your many accomplishments.  You’ve written for numerous periodicals, appeared on multiple television shows, taught creative writing as a professor, and on and on it goes.  Care to give us the full background and lowdown on who exactlyJenny Boylan is?

Jennifer Finney Boylan: Well, that makes me sound quite fabulous, I must say. But I guess I just see myself as a storyteller.  I know I’m seen as some sort of spokeswoman for civil rights but the only thing I really know how to do is tell stories.  Still, that’s a good day’s work, isn’t it?

It’s true that being trans has given me the opportunity to tell a particular kind of story that hasn’t generally been told, at least not by someone trained as a writer, and I’m grateful for that.  It seems to me that we can break through to people with stories in a way that we can’t in any other way.  My mother has a saying, “It is impossible to hate anyone whose story you know.”  And so I have tried to tell stories of people who are…

(click here for the rest of the interview…)

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  • 4576011240_572c819271

    Jenny Boylan's twelfth book, FALCON QUINN AND THE CRIMSON VAPOR, now on sale from HarperCollins!

  • Browse Inside Falcon Quinn!

  • PROFESSOR JENNIFER FINNEY BOYLAN is the author of twelve books, including She's Not There: a Life in Two Genders, and I'm Looking Through You: Growing Up Haunted, both published by Random House. A novelist, memoirist, and short story writer, she is also a nationally known advocate for civil rights. Jenny has appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show, Live with Larry King, the Today Show, the Barbara Walters Special, NPR's Marketplace and Talk of the Nation; she has also been the subject of documentaries on CBS News' 48 Hours. and The History Channel. She is a regular contributor to the op/ed page of the New York Times and Conde Nast Traveler magazine. Since 1988, she has been Professor of English at Colby College in Maine; in 2010, she was the Hoyer-Updike Distinguished Writer at Ursinus College in Collegeville, Pennsylvania. She has also served on the judging committee of the Fulbright Scholars, administered by the U.S. Department of State.

    Her next published book will be STUCK IN THE MIDDLE WITH YOU: Parenthood in Two Genders, coming from Crown/Random House in 2013, along with an updated, 10th anniversary edition of SHE'S NOT THERE.

    Check out the Twitter feed at JennyBoylan; or join Jennifer Finney Boylan on facebook.

  • Blog Archive

  • The Boylan Family, summer 2010

    DSC_0063 "You hang around our family, you learn all kinds of stuff."
  • Will Forte as Jennifer Finney Boylan on “Saturday Night Live”

    WiFo-Jennifer Finney Boylan-1
  • Jenny with Barbara Walters, December, 2008

    wawa
  • Jenny atop Maine’s Mount Katahdin

    2036947979_34bfbec240 August, 2002.
  • Surrounded

    boylanWith President Clinton and Maine's Governor John Baldacci, fall 2006.
  • JFB and Edward Albee

    edward_albee_by_fred_j_field-150x150

    Edward had been my teacher at Johns Hopkins in the winter of 1986. He visited Colby in fall, 2007. As we took our leave of each other, he kissed me on both cheeks and said, "We have done well. You and I."

  • Jenny and her teacher, the great John Barth

    Boylan_Barth

    Jack was my professor at JHU when I did my thesis, back in the day. After many years, I can now confidently say I finally understand his definition of plot. Which is, of course, "the perturbation of an unstable homeostatic system and its catastrophic restoration to a new and complexified equilibrium."