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What Courtney Knew
First of all, I did a bad job with the names. I've thought about going back to fix it, but by now it seems a bit late.
Usually I have a chart with all the characters listed, but for some reason I missed the fact that almost every character's name starts with an M: Marcie, Maisie, Misty/Mary, Margaret/Maisie... even Miriam! And I bet I missed one or two.
And why were there *two* Maisie's? Maisie Beale, the little girl, and Maisie Sabatino, now known as Mrs. Wix?
Honestly, I don't remember why. I did have a reason for the two Maisie's, but I can't remember what it was. Maybe it was just to bug young Maisie as she looked in the yearbook. That was probably the only reason, but of course it had the collateral effect of mixing people up.
There is the twin-naming thing, too: Misty's real name is Mary, and so her twin is Margaret. Mary and Margaret: very common twin names. Again, somehow I missed all the M's.
And speaking of similar names, why is Ms. Overmore, who teaches at a Blessed Yvette High School, called "Yvette"? More confusion! And now she'll be the principal? She'll be the Yvette in Blessed Yvette.
I must have had a reason... it wasn't for a silly joke. Unfortunately, I can't remember why I made that match-up. I only remember that I did it on purpose.
In any case, another slip-up on my part. Sorry!
However, I *did* have a reason for calling the poor little rich girl Maisie, even if it is an old-fashioned, outdated name.
And EVEN IF it was way too similar to the name Marcie... People mixed up the names in the comments, and I mixed them up myself in the story. Luckily, attentive readers were quick to point out my errors, and I fixed them.
The names are way too close! If you twiddle your eyes, they're identical.
And yet, even though all the M-starting names was a mistake, and putting Yvette in Blessed Yvette's was a bone-headed move, I don't think "Maisie" was wrong.
Why didn't I pick a different name, a modern name, a name that was popular in 1993, when Maisie was born? A name like Sabrina or Haley or Briana? Why not call the story What Courtney Knew?
I was surprised that no one noticed — or at least no one said — that I'd not only taken the title from a Henry James story (What Maisie Knew), but I'd even used the same names of his characters.
His Maisie started off like mine: a young girl, a minor, inherits a pile of money. Her parents have a bitter divorce and fight over the girl's money.
She reacts to her suffering by pretending to not see, or not understand, what's going on. In her case, everyone believes that What Maisie Knew was exactly nothing.
While I was reading Henry James' story, I had no idea what was going to happen in Marcie Donner's life. I knew that she would move to New Jersey and go to a Catholic girl's school, but beyond that, nothing. I couldn't cook up any wild, rope-swinging stunts for her, and I was stalled.
At the same time, there was another story I was working on, a story that had nothing to do with Marcie. It was a ghost story that was SUPPOSED to be a transgendered Topper-like comedy. It was moving along, but it was going in a direction that I didn't like. Somehow, it became very grim and dark, and my dead girl turned out to not be very nice. Plus, I had absolutely no idea how it was going to end.
So there I was: writing a "comedy" about a ghost that wasn't funny at all, and wanting to write more about Marcie, but lacking a story.
All the while, that title What Maisie Knew kept banging around in my head, and it suddenly struck me that What Maisie Knew might be something very interesting: something about Marcie Donner.
Of course, it couldn't be a frontal collision. Maisie couldn't just meet Marcie and say, "You look familiar... Hey! I know you! You're Mark Donner, in a dress!"
It would be much worse if it wasn't certain... if it was a impending threat... if I kept adding reasons that pointed to Maisie knowing Mark, or knowing *about* Mark.
And there were a lot of indications of just that.
Unfortunately, putting the Mark-tomboy story in front of it all effectively killed the issue for most readers... even if, ironically, the tomboy story made it possible for EVERYONE in the story to talk about Marcie as a boy. Mrs. Means does it right off the bat. Maisie keeps bringing it up. Even Susan talks about it.
Of course, Maisie doesn't KNOW that Marcie was a boy. She "knows," but she doesn't know-know. It's not a complete, fully-articulated, verified-by-evidence knowing. It's more of an unformed idea that kept running around at the edge of her consciousness, jumping and waving... Maisie was never *sure*; she just had the sense that there was SOMETHING in Marcie's Marky past that didn't fit.
One of the biggest hints came at the end of Chapter 14 ("Outed Already?"), when Maisie says the name "Mark Donner" out loud in a thoughtful way, as if it rang a bell. Because it did ring a bell.
Another big hint came at the end of Chapter 17 ("Just Like Us"), when Marcie's father realizes that Maisie and her mother used to live in Tarhent, the town where Mark grew up.
There are other hints spread throughout the story. I'm not going to list them all.
By the end of the story, you can conclude that Maisie had at least *heard* the name "Mark Donner" when she was younger. This is why she called Miriam Clegg: because she knew that Miriam would know, and she hoped that Miriam might have some juicy gossip about young Marcie. Maisie wasn't expecting to find out that "Mark" wasn't a just tomboyish girl, and she was shocked.
So, Maisie knew. Or half-knew.
But to my surprise, none of the comments at any point said, "OH MY GOD! What if Maisie knew that Marcie used to be a boy! What if they knew each other back in California?"
I mean, why do you think Maisie came from California? She could have easily come from Austin, Texas, or Beanbag, Wisconsin, or any other place.
It's funny, the way so many story elements got analyzed down to atoms in the comments, and so many close guesses about what was coming next, but no one gave any attention to Maisie knowing Mark, or knowing *of* Mark.
But, anyway, that was my idea: that Maisie knew. It's still there, in the story, coloring things...
Of course, Maisie knew what James' Maisie pretended not to know: she knew that her parents didn't want her. At least her father doesn't. Her mother does, but Maisie may never come to realize it.
So, one evening I was walking up Comm Ave, here in Boston, thinking about Marcie Donner and a young heiress named Maisie, trying to work out the story, but it still didn't go right, and for sure it wasn't funny AT ALL.
Which reminded me of my ghost story, which was downright grim. And I suddenly saw in my mind's eye a house I'd once lived in, and there, in the upstairs window, a little face looking out.
Misty Sabatino.
Finally, it all clicked.
I love the name, and the girl, and the spooky things she can do, and I miss her now that she's "moved on."
My favorite episode was Chapter 25, "And Then What Happened?" which ended like this:
"Who are you?" she asked me. "Why are you here?"
I tried to respond, but panicked: the words caught in my throat. A wave of fear washed over me, and I clutched my blanket desperately with both hands.
There was no reason to ask who she was: I recognized her right away.
She was Misty Sabatino.
I was aiming for gooseflesh; I know that *I* got when I read it; I don't know about anyone else.
And if it was a movie? I imagined Emma Roberts playing Marcie, and Victoria Justice as Misty. (I watch a lot of kids shows with my daughter.)
And that's What Maisie Knew!
Comments
*giggles*
Just because it wasn't said, doesn't mean someone didn't know that ^^ *giggles* Believe it or not, that's EXACTLY what I thought it meant ^^
I know who I am, I am me, and I like me ^^
Transgender, Gamer, Little, Princess, Therian and proud :D
AHA!
So *you* were the one! ;-)
I'll admit it
That's what I thought it meant, too. And I didn't say anything on purpose. :) More fun that way.
As for names, I wrote a story one time and gave it to a friend who pointed out that all the character's names but one started with a J. And my real name starts with a J. :)
- Erin
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
James who?
Not too polite, never heard of him.
K
"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose"
Janis Joplin
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin
Henry James
I was kidding about "James Henry."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_James
He was a novelist and short-story writer.
A lot of people have to read Daisy Miller and Turn of the Screw in high school, probably because they're short. He wrote Portrait of a Lady, The Golden Bowl, The Bostonians, The Americans, ...
He can be AMAZING. Especially at writing about the small changes in the way people see things.
However, he had this tendency, especially later in life, to write such in such an obscure, indirect way that you have no idea what in the world is happening. It's funny (to me) because I think he thought he was at his best when he was most indirect and incomprehensible, which of course is as wrong as can be.
I was hoping that someone might be in a bookstore, and happen on his book, and say, "What the hell?"
Trust me
The sections I go to in a bookstore won't have anything like that in them. Journalism classes got me out of English Lit*, Thank God. Dickens and Shakesphere were the last required reading I did, in the 10th grade. The only classics since then are on the Oldies Rock stations.
*Should mention, in all fairness, English Lit wasn't a required course in Norway where I spent most of my high school years. ;-)
K
"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose"
Janis Joplin
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin
I took "knew" as past tense..
So if it had been "What Maisie Knows.." then all the above would point that way...although I did ask you before the kidnapping if I recall correctly if Maisie does know...
Since it was past tense and you threw out the red herring of the OTHER Maisie, I thought SHE knew something relating to the cop and/or what happened to her sister.
Huggles
Alexis
Yes, I remember
You did.
I think
I think it's still a bitchen story even if all the characters names start with M. I wrote a story once that had two Williams that were TG and for the life of me I didn't know why. I too forget what I name people and have to reread some of my stuff just so I can continue writing. I'm going to have to do as you do and make a list of who each person is. Do your kids know about these stories? I finally told my wife that I wrote stories and she couldn't believe I did. My youngest son has read Forever and found it enjoyable, but creepy. I don't think any of my other kids have read anything else I've written, but, being the father of our country, I have six, I wouldn't doubt that they haven't found this site. I'm looking forward to more adventures, Arecee
No one knows but you
"Kaleigh Way" is a pen name that I've used for a while. No one who knows me IRL has a clue that I do this. My wife and daughter and my friends know that I write, and they've seen non-TG things I've written, but none of these stories.
I've begun broaching the subject with my sisters... My wife guesses jokingly about things... but I think they're pretty far from thinking I'd put this much time into all this.
While I was writing the fairy tales, I read a TON of fairy tales to my daughter. I read to her every night, and I did tell her the story of one of the TG fairy tales, but that's as far as it's gone.
Which is why
I use the Arecee pen name, which are my initials. I started writing because i didn't like the stories I had found and didn't want anyone to know I was doing it. I have a business, which was larger than it is now, and if some of my bigoted clients found out about Arecee and his writings, you can imagine the results. My youngest son is gay and he read a printed version of Forever. I don't think he's gone on line to read anything else I've written. I use one of our driving sessions in a chapter of Show Me where Jennifer is learning to drive. I hope your family would be able to accept stories like Marcie's as they are very good.
I Just Thought Of Something
I know that Misty has moved on, but I was thinking that maybe she could make appearances as a guardian angel. Knowing all the trouble that she is known to get into, Marcie needs all the help she can get. After what she did during the kidnapping, God assigns Misty to watch over her. She could make appearances at the end of Marcie's bed from time to time and communicate things to her. It might be a little out there for you, but I thought I would suggest it anyway.
Hugs,
Jenn
I think she has to come back somehow
She was too good to just go away.
Whar Maisie Knew or Dose Not Know
Kaleigh; Even with the little errors this has been a great story and I have a problem having to wait for the next chapter all the time to find out what happens next and I'm sure that when you complete it, All of us will be wishing for more that is how great it has been... Richard
Richard
Come to think of it...
A LOT of Superman's closest people had LL names....Lois Lane, Lana Lang, Linda Lee (Supergirl), the mermaid Lorie whose last name I can't remember but started with an L....
:)
Hugs
Lex Luthor ...
A man I have much in common with, unfortunately it is not the vast riches, criminal genius and power, but when it comes to hair or lack thereof ...
John in Wauwatosa
John in Wauwatosa
DUH!
After, Lois the most important LL...I knew there were more :)
Hugs
Pretty funny
And I wonder whether it was done unconsciously...
Probably
I think pretty much everything John does is done in a near-unconscious state. ;-)
K
"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose"
Janis Joplin
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin
AccidentaLLy
According to Jerry and Joe, originally it was accidental with Lois Lane, Lana Lang and Lex Luthor. After that, they did it on purpose as a trademark.
After all, they both had the same initials, J.S. :)
- Erin
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
Lori Lemaris
Hadn't thought of her in a long time...
Eric
Also...
Lyla Lellor (a Kryptonian he met while time traveling), Luma Lynai (a superwoman from another planet) and Linda Lee (Supergirl's secret Identity).There were others including sisters, too. Lex's sister was Lena and Lois's was Lucy. The most unusual one may be Le-Lak; the name Superman had to say to return to Earth from Mr. Mxyzptlk's home universe: it's Kal-El backwards. :)
- Erin
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
M's
The many 'M' names was sometimes a bit confusing, but the text always made it clear. I thought the confusion was me reading the story at 1 am in the morning. Good story. I like the way you write. Oh yes, don't forget the 'M' names in "Short Chapters", Macy, Miranda and Uncle Mickey.
This all reminds me of a published story some professor recommended I read for fun. The author deliberatly avoided using the letter 'E' in a story that went on for more than a dozen pages. I don't remember either the author or the name of the story, but it has been more than 30 years since I read it. It was an amazing excercise in language and not a bad story either. I'd like to run it down again sometime.
Aechel
Aechel
*more* M's? and the e-less story
How crazy... I wonder what it is with me and those names.
In Italian, if you're "deep in the M" -- M stands for merda, which shouldn't be too hard to figure out.
About the e-less story, you might find a trace of it here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipogram
M's and no "E's"
Thanks much,That ran it down for me. I had no idea that the form had a name, "A Lipogram". I don't think anyone ever told me or used the word around me. Why would they. I was an engineering major not an english major. You know, "When I went to skool I couldn't even spell Inginear and now I are one". The story was "Gadsby" written by Ernest Vincent Wright (1873?–1939?). It was a Story of Over 50,000 Words, which, except for the introduction and a note at the end, did not use the letter e. Every word was properly spelled and all narration was grammatically correct. I don't remember wadeing through all 50,000 words, but what I did read made an impression.
'M' names. You still have a lot of stories to write. There is Molly, Myrna, Malissa, Marissa, Malinda, Mindy, Margo, Margret (Maggie), Margrete (Margie), then there was this girl in HS who insisted her name was Maari, (grade book said Mary). Those were just M named people I knew and could remember at the moment.
Aechel
Aechel