J. Alexander Cohen

Cozy-adjacent fantasy author

Menu
  • Biography
  • Contact Me
  • Links
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Published Works
  • Talio Rossa and the Elixir of Life (Novel, Forthcoming)
  • Talio’s Codex (Novel)
  • The Library at Eventide (Novel, Querying)
  • Upcoming Works
  • “Cozy adjacent”?
Menu

“I Thought People Like That [Unalived] Themselves”

Posted on January 6, 2024January 6, 2024 by jalexandercohen

Back in the bad old days of the early 20th century, queer fiction had to have an unhappy ending in order to get published. Much like the Hays Code required movie villains to get their comeuppance, there was an unspoken rule that homosexual characters needed to come to an unhappy end – and if they died, all the better.

Thus the title of Eric Rofes’ book, I Thought People Like That Killed Themselves, a non-fiction account of queer suicide. I swear I remember a book or movie that the title came from, but I haven’t been able to dig it up online (maybe it’s in Boys in the Band?).

E.M. Forster wrote Maurice, a book with a gay couple who have a happy ending, back in 1913. Because of that, he never tried to get it published. It was published in 1971 after Forster’s death.

By the time I was old enough to read queer fiction in the 1980s, the majority of it fell into three categories (I’m excluding literary queer fiction here):

  • Coming out
  • Dealing with HIV/AIDS
  • What one magazine called “trendy boys in heat” – the trials and tribulations of sex and romance within the white, upper-middle-class set

Coming out and dealing with AIDS are and continue to be perennially important subjects. Lots of queer folks struggle with coming out. If you’ve accomplished it, you also know it’s not a one-and-done. You never stop coming out: every new workplace, friend, trip, etc. is an opportunity for you to do so. And AIDS continues to cast a shadow on the gay community, even with PrEP and HIV treatments.

Once I realized I only wanted to write gay fiction, I decided to take a different direction. I wanted to show:

  1. Proud gay men,
  2. Living fulfilling lives, and
  3. Achieving happy endings.

Stories where being gay could still be an issue in their world, but where the characters had come to terms with their sexual identity and place in society. Gay men (and eventually other queer folk as I broadened my horizons) whose gayness informed their lives, but did not constitute the sum total of them. Flawed, funny, sweet and troubled characters.

I continue to use that definition for every story I write. It’s been my guiding star since 1991, when I wrote my first gay character, a cheery positive pornographer (the story, fortunately, remains unpublished and lost to time).

Fiction is life as the author thinks it should be. Real life has enough unhappy endings; why not create worlds where everyone gets what they deserve* at the end?


*Some characters may not get a happy ending exactly, but all the good ones get some form of self-actualization.

Related

Category: Musings, Other

Post navigation

← The Dreaded Message Novel
Slow TV: A Cousin to Cozy Fantasy →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent posts

Talio's Codex Nominated for Small Spec Book Awards

This was an unexpected delight! The Small Spec Book Awards (SSBA) have nominated Talio's Codex for a Fantasy award. I'm so stoked and chuffed.

Four Ways to Turn Your Standalone Novel Into a Series

Back to the Future was intended to be a standalone movie. When it was a huge success, the studio asked Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis for a sequel.

Oh Boy

In This Time

In this time of chaos On this day of reckoning I take a pause I take a breath I take the time to think To remember To set my intent

What My Mother Taught Me About Writing

Back in June, I wrote a post about the various things my father taught me about writing (and creative work in general). Mom turned 96 this month, and

  • Biography
  • Contact Me
  • Links
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Published Works
  • Talio Rossa and the Elixir of Life (Novel, Forthcoming)
  • Talio's Codex (Novel)
  • The Library at Eventide (Novel, Querying)
  • Upcoming Works
  • "Cozy adjacent"?

Follow on Instagram

© 2024 J. Alexander Cohen.

© 2025 J. Alexander Cohen | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme