Vorlage:Short description Vorlage:Infobox writer Torrey Peters is an American author.[1][2] Her debut novel, Detransition, Baby, published by Penguin Random House, has received mainstream and critical success.[3][4] The novel was nominated for the 2021 Women’s Prize for Fiction.[5]
Early life and education
Peters was born near Chicago, Illinois.[6] Her father was a professor and her mother was a lawyer.[6]
She grew up in Chicago, later attending Hampshire College.[7] She graduated from the University of Iowa with an MFA and from Dartmouth College with an MA in Comparative Literature.[8][9]
Peters came out as transgender aged 26. At 30, she began taking hormones to physically transition.[6]
Work
Peters’s first two self-published novellas, The Masker and Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones, were published online in 2016 and reviewed by writer Harron Walker for them.[1] The Masker is about a sissy contemplating transitioning from male to female.[8] Set in a dystopian future where bioterrorism has destroyed the body's ability to produce sex hormones, Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones follows Patient Zero and her cat-and-mouse relationship with Lexi, a working-class, gun-obsessed trans girl.[10] Glamour Boutique, Peters's third novella, explores a casual Craigslist encounter at a crossdressers’ boutique store.[8]
She has written reviews for a breadth of transgender and gender non-conforming authors, such as Janet Mock, Akwaeke Emezi, and Casey Plett, who have published books through Arsenal Pulp Press, Metonymy, and Topside Press.[11]
Detransition, Baby
Peters' debut novel, Detransition, Baby, published by Penguin Random House in 2021, has been met with critical success and praise crafting a tender exploration of gender, parenthood, and love.[12][13] The novel follows Reese, a trans woman longing to be a mother by sleeping with married men; Ames, previously Amy, who lived as a trans woman before detransitioning to live again as male; and Katrina, a Chinese Jewish woman who is pregnant with Ames’s child. Ames suggests that Katrina let Reese assist in raising the baby with them, because he will be unable to fully be present as a “father.”[14][15] Peters has stated that the character of Ames is inspired by an experience she had in 2016, when she visited Mexico and wore a suit to pass as male and avoid questions from customs about her male passport.[6]
Peters reflected that the novel is written in the genre of a soap opera and that the novel's characters talk "how I talk with my friends."[16][17]
The dedication for Detransition, Baby is addressed to "divorced cis women". Peters' reasoning for this is that "divorced cis women must start over at a point in adulthood when they're supposed to be established", which she compares to what trans women experience.[18]
Detransition, Baby was nominated for the 2021 Women’s Prize for Fiction, making Peters the first openly trans woman nominated for the award.[19] The longlisting of Peters was met with some controversy, including an open letter published online by the Wild Woman Writing Club. The letter argued that Peters is "male" and therefore should not be eligible for a prize created for women.[20] Its list of signatories included atheist writer Ophelia Benson and environmentalist Rebecca Lush.[21] Authors including Naoise Dolan, another nominee for the 2021 prize, condemned the letter and expressed their support for Peters. The organisers of the prize released a statement defending the decision to nominate Peters' book.[22]
In early 2021, a TV adaptation of Detransition, Baby was announced. Grey’s Anatomy writer-producers Joan Rater and Tony Phelan are the showrunners for the drama/comedy television adaptation.[23]
Personal life
In 2009, Peters married Melissa Minor (later known as Olive Melissa Minor); the two later divorced.[7][24][25][26] Vorlage:As of Peters lives in New York with her fiancée.[6]
References
- ↑ a b Torrey Peters | Penguin Random House. In: PenguinRandomhouse.com. Abgerufen am 23. November 2020 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Torrey Peters. In: www.artforum.com. Abgerufen am 6. Januar 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Lila Shapiro: Torrey Peters Goes There. In: Vulture. 6. Januar 2021, abgerufen am 6. Januar 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Here Are the 10 New Books You Should Read in January. In: Time. Abgerufen am 6. Januar 2021.
- ↑ Jennifer Zhan: Torrey Peters Addresses Transphobic Backlash Over Women's Prize Nomination. In: Vulture. 7. April 2021, abgerufen am 16. April 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ a b c d e Susannah Butter: Trans writer Torrey Peters: ‘I have a lot of empathy for JK Rowling’. In: www.standard.co.uk. 7. April 2021, abgerufen am 18. Juni 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ a b Minor-Peters. In: Wilmington Star News. Abgerufen am 28. Mai 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ a b c Harron Walker: Trans Author Torrey Peters Wants to Air Our Dirty Laundry. In: them. Abgerufen am 23. November 2020 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ The Best of Brevity: Zoe Bossiere and Dinty W. Moore with Contributors (VIRTUAL EVENT) | McNally Jackson Books. In: www.mcnallyjackson.com. Abgerufen am 27. November 2020.
- ↑ (Trans) Love and Other Scars: An Interview with Torrey Peters, Author of Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones. In: Autostraddle. 20. Februar 2017, abgerufen am 23. November 2020 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Torrey Peters: 12 of the Best Books by Trans Authors, According to Torrey Peters. In: Oprah Magazine. 19. November 2020, abgerufen am 27. November 2020 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Rachel Epstein: Pre-Order These Highly-Anticipated 2021 Book Releases. In: Marie Claire. 16. November 2020, abgerufen am 24. November 2020 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Noah Berlatsky: Review: A social comedy on 'detransitioning' asks: Who is anyone to judge? In: Los Angeles Times. 6. Januar 2021, abgerufen am 6. Januar 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Alma's Favorite Books for Winter 2021. In: Alma. 24. November 2020, abgerufen am 24. November 2020 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Serpent's Tail to publish 'uniquely trans take on love and parenting' by Torrey Peters | The Bookseller. In: www.thebookseller.com. Abgerufen am 23. November 2020.
- ↑ Writing for a Trans Audience: Talking with Torrey Peters. In: The Rumpus.net. 18. Januar 2021, abgerufen am 6. März 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ Christina Cauterucci, J. Bryan Lowder: What Stories of Transition and Divorce Have in Common. In: Slate Magazine. 21. Januar 2021, abgerufen am 6. März 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ Torrey Peters. In: www.artforum.com. Abgerufen am 6. Januar 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Jennifer Zhan: Torrey Peters Addresses Transphobic Backlash Over Women's Prize Nomination. In: Vulture. 7. April 2021, abgerufen am 16. April 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Women’s prize condemns online attack on trans nominee Torrey Peters. In: the Guardian. 7. April 2021, abgerufen am 18. Juni 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ Open letter to the Women’s Prize. In: Wild Woman Writing Club. 6. April 2021, abgerufen am 18. Juni 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ Women’s prize condemns online attack on trans nominee Torrey Peters. In: the Guardian. 7. April 2021, abgerufen am 18. Juni 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ Justin Curto: Move Over, Sex and the City Reboot, a Detransition, Baby Series Is on the Way. In: Vulture. 4. März 2021, abgerufen am 16. April 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
- ↑ Minor-Peters. In: Wilmington Star News. Abgerufen am 28. Mai 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ WILMER COGGINS Obituary (2012) - Gainesville, FL - Gainesville Sun. In: www.legacy.com. Abgerufen am 28. Mai 2021 (englisch).
- ↑ Torrey Peters: Detransition, Baby. Random House Publishing Group, 2021, ISBN 978-0-593-13339-2 (englisch, google.com).