'You Know Me Well' co-author Nina LaCour on her new book and queer representation in YA
As I was reading You Know Me Well—a new young adult novel co-authored by Nina LaCour and David Levithan, released on Tuesday—I racked my brain trying to think of the YA books I read as a teenager. And that’s when I realized: My favorite YA books as a teen weren’t even books at all.
They were movies like Hedwig and the Angry Inch and Velvet Goldmine, manga like Fake and Ranma 1/2. In these media, I found so many different expressions of queerness that were missing from my everyday life in the suburbs of Worcester, Mass. If I had stumbled upon more YA books like You Know Me Well—whose narrative alternates between the perspectives of queer teens Mark and Kate, who meet, by chance, at a San Francisco Pride celebration—I wonder if I would’ve been a more avid reader of the burgeoning literary genre back in the mid-aughts.
I recently got in touch with You Know Me Well co-author Nina LaCour. LaCour, who lives in the East Bay with her wife and 3-year-old daughter, is also the author of Everything Leads to You (2015), The Disenchantments (2013), and Hold Still (2009), along with an as-yet-unannounced fifth novel to be published by Dutton in early 2017. Over the phone, we spoke about her latest release, the collaborative process of writing alongside David Levithan (Boy Meets Boy; Nick and Nora’s Infinite Playlist; Will Grayson, Will Grayson), queer representation in YA fiction, and more.
Fusion: So, how did this collaboration between you and David Levithan come about?
Well, I had been a longtime reader of David’s books. The first time I met him, he was on tour with John Green for [their co-authored novel] Will Grayson, Will Grayson, and I had just published my first book [Hold Still] with the same editor. I was pretty starstruck by both of them. I continued to see David at other conferences, and then he asked me in a kind of abstract way if I would want to write a book with him. I was super excited. He had wanted to write a book about a gay boy and a lesbian girl for a while, and he was looking for the right writing partner.
You and David trade off chapters in You Know Me Well. You write the chapters from Kate’s perspective, and David handles Mark’s. Was the process pretty back and forth, or did you have any input on the other’s sections?
Together, we came up with a very loose concept: We would have a boy and a girl who meet during Pride in San Francisco, and they would experience something together that would begin a friendship. Then, David wrote the first chapter and sent it to me. I picked it up from there, and the entire book was like that, chapter by chapter. We didn’t do any outlining or brainstorming together, so we kept each other on our toes. I had never done a collaboration like this before. When I write books, I have to think carefully about all the characters and the plotting and really stew in every detail, but with [You Know Me Well] I was powerless to all the twists and turns David would send back. I had to totally let the book go once I sent over my chapters.
Your character, Kate, is about to graduate from high school. She plans on studying painting at UCLA in the fall, but she’s really questioning if that’s the right track for her. This theme of meeting expectations vs. being impulsive before your teenage years are up seems to pop up a lot in your novels. Is that something you dealt with a lot when you were in high school?
No, it isn’t. I didn’t really question—I kind of just went along this very traditional academic route. I graduated from high school at 17, finished college in four years, immediately went to grad school, and finished in two years. It’s only in the past few years that I’ve started to question [that path]. What if I had explored a little bit more? What if I had given myself other options? What would that have been like? I got to be a high school teacher for a few years, which gave me an outside perspective on how terrifying it can be for 17-, 18-year-olds to leave home and be expected to make that decision. College right after high school isn’t really the right choice for some people. Sometimes there isn’t room for teenagers to know they have options—that one path isn’t the only path.