Not enough conflict?

When I started reading TG stories on the web many years ago every story I read was interesting since I had never read stories with TG protagonists before. Finally someone I could identify with who was dealing with things that mattered to me.

After a decade or so this identification is still important so I still read TG stories but now the story has to provide something beyond the mere basics - the tropes of TG fiction such as self-discovery, the process of acquiring the clothes and paraphernalia, the salon experience, the shopping trip, the talk with the parents, the visit to the shrink... You know the list.

I now believe that in order to please long-time readers such as myself there are three main ways to make a TG story interesting.

The first one is conflict. Isaac Asimov wrote his first robot story where he introduced the concept of the three laws of robotics. The story was like a utopia of how wonderful robots could be - they were used as babysitters and the children fell in love with them, etc (It's been a while since I read these so I'm fuzzy on the details). The publisher published the story but wrote a letter back advising Isaac that "Here are the three laws of Science Fiction Publishing: A story must contain conflict; A story must contain conflict; A story must contain conflict".

We have seen a row of stories lately that contain no conflict. The protagonist transitions and everything runs as if on rails. This is how we want it to be, and it could be argued that in several places and countries this is indeed roughly how things often happen. These stories serve the purpose of informing newcomers and those hesitating to transition how things are, should be, and/or could be. To oldtimers, such stories can be rather boring. But the flipside is that if the story contains too much strife and hardship it can become an upsetting read. Sometimes this is exactly what I want, but not always. If every transition was difficult in a million ways we'd be doing the readers - especially those hesitating to transition - a disservice.

The second way is Great storytelling. I love witty dialogue, a rich internal (mental) monologue, and detailed and colorful exposition. If you are a great storyteller you could write about your shopping list and we'd love to read it. But this is hard to pull off. Not everyone has the sense of humor, life experience or writing experience that this requires.

The third way is to place a TG protagonist in an interesting situation and show how they deal with it. It's been said that "Good Science Fiction is good fiction". Same here - a good TG story should be interesting and fun to read even if the protagonist hadn't been TG; Bonus points if the author can make the TG element relevant to the story without overwhelming it. These are now my favorite kinds of stories and my favorite authors often do exactly this. This kind of story requires coming up with the idea for the interesting situation and/or may require extensive research. Note that the story need not even be about transition; I've enjoyed stories where the transition happens in the first chapter and then is hardly ever mentioned again.

It would be my guess that beginning authors tend to write autobiographical stories based loosely on their own experience and then move on to the wishful thinking transition-on-rails stories for a while. If they grow as authors they might start insisting on coming up with the idea of an interesting situation before writing another one, in effect insisting on varying their output. And finally, they grow to be great storytellers and can now write about whatever they please.

- Moni

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