Nonbinary, Trans, Pan, And Lovesick by E.S. Corby ~ Peek Inside And Giveaway

Posted: August 29, 2023 in Excerpt, giveaways
Tags: , ,

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Welcome to my stop on the virtual book tour for Nonbinary, Trans, Pan And Lovesick organized by Goddess Fish Promotions.

Author E.S. Corby will award a $20 Amazon or B&N Gift Card to a randomly drawn winner. Don’t forget to enter!

And you can click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Nonbinary, Trans, Pan, And Lovesick

by E.S. Corby

 

 

Genre: LGBTQIA+ Poetry

Synopsis

Sex is awkward! Gender is confusing!

Discovering his gender and sexual identities in the lonely dungeon of the pandemic, Echo Corby found an outlet through poetry. Graduating high school as everyone was thrust into isolation, friends were hard to find and love was even harder. Loneliness made him crave connection even more, but what did he like and who would love him?

Piecing together the queer world, Corby uses comedy and anecdote to express the uncomfortable ins and awkward outs of gender, sex, love and all outrage that comes with categorization. This collection of autobiographical poetry is a form of release and expression of the vibrant emotions that so many of the LGBTQIA+ community struggle with.

Corby prides himself as an open-book. The vulnerability enclosed within these pages proves as much.

 

Enjoy this peek inside:

Plant Shop

I went to a plant shop with my family/friend,

And knocked things over like a freight truck making a tight turn,

In the shop with candles and glass things and books propped on spindly legged tables,

You’d wonder why I was so concerned,

Of course something would fall! —But no.

I’m not usually this uncoordinated,

And compared to the family/friend I brought along,

The person my family doesn’t trust with any drink without a cap,

Who was suddenly surefooted in contrast to me,

And as lithe as sun-basking deer.

The reason for my klutziness I realized as we left,

Was I had a crush on the person behind the counter.

And when I asked them to make a cactus and succulent array,

Maybe it was an apology for my prudence and an excuse to stay.

In the general area, while they made me my pot,

I knocked over dirt after the candles, I knocked over a lot.

When I spilled all those candles onto the ground,

The most upsetting thing was that they weren’t even around!

I’d never been that clumsy, I didn’t think,

Shatter glass, spill dirt,

Then I turn pink,

When they’re there and they smile at me.

Of course, I offered to pay—

They declined the offer, smiling.

Wait, isn’t that the American way?

But in Europe they don’t do that, the store writes it off as tax.

I wish I had known that before I let my companion assure me that I didn’t need to

To make me relax.

Is it desperate to ponder if they had let me pass free,

Because they were actually attracted to me?

Their coworker looked peeved,

No—outright upset.

But they smiled perhaps dissimilar to anyone I’ve met.

I mentioned the dorms; they knew I wasn’t twelve.

They must have assumed I was a lesbian like everyone else.

I know they assumed this of me because of a conversation after,

Where my family/friend said to me that they hadn’t even asked her—

They had told her that we made a great couple.

I didn’t ask of course, but based on the conversation’s context,

It seemed clear my companion didn’t correct them.

Why didn’t she correct them? Maybe it didn’t feel right,

When we spilled in their store and made their shift tight,

With cleaning up the glass and the bits of dirt

That I left in my wake when I turned my metaphorical skirt

To the door with my cactus in hand.

I don’t claim to know their pronoun,

I’d never just assume,

But they could quite possibly have been a lesbian too.

And in that case, maybe I would dare to be a lesbian for a day.

Or is that too self-destructive to muse then to say?

Now I stare at the wall,

Placidly daydreaming,

Of a date we might have had,

Or a life with some meaning.

Maybe I’m just depressed,

Or it’s just PMS,

But I consider a life that isn’t such a stagnant mess.

No pandemic—I’m in college,

Surrounded by peers,

And I’m not suffering from the loneliness,

That makes minutes feel like years.

And my family/friend keeps laughing,

About the stuff that I spilled,

In the store with my crush,

Where I can’t hope to rebuild,

A relationship with them because they think I’m a double—not single—lesbian.

About Author Echo Corby:

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https://i0.wp.com/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhE_0L1wAa9xexnwJr-MjnDJVFMjdq-6Q6l641MFRQDJvwtsrWYgaCOLMhYKow3voJG0WZ8osmlEfjY7X9hfZtB4TpROwDuxK9mbEG6oY-jjFPgf0_iY9zsX38lYsJ91ULVHcrOm_4kUktnT7V5VCqH3dX6a0N61iXTB7W2q7SLyfysvSbtBsJTs8Fd9oI/s3984/Author%20Image.JPG?ssl=1

Having started writing “seriously” as an ignorant fourteen-year-old, Echo has progressed in his writing and editing skills since finding the inspiration in middle school. His whole life, his imagination has always driven him in the creative writing and arts fields. The imagination of childhood has never left him but has evolved into something malleable to his career and tolerable in his vocabulary and sentence structure. Echo’s writing and other creative endeavors have deep relevance to his personal life, as his characters, world and themes always reflect aspects of his personality and identity in ways that may go beyond the average reader’s comprehension. Often writers add elements of themselves to their characters, as it is easier to write what we know, but Echo goes beyond that in exploring deeply sentimental to traumatic elements in his life as a form of therapy for himself and others tackling similar internal conflicts. As a trans masc, nonbinary, pansexual man discovering his identity in the middle of a pandemic, his writing also acts as a way of exploring himself deeper as well as dealing with mental health issues he has been struggling with his whole life. Writing is both deeply personal for him and also something he has always wanted to share with the world. He feels emotions are better told then hidden and that building a community is extremely important to recovery and rejuvenation.

Buy Link: Amazon

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Comments
  1. Mary Preston says:

    The tag line gives me a good sense of the story.

  2. Marianne Judy says:

    Many thanks for hosting today!

  3. Cathy French says:

    Not a genre I’m too familiar with but am looking forward to reading

  4. Anne says:

    Intriguing and captivating.

  5. Wendy Hutton says:

    sounds interesting, not something I normally would read but worth a shot

  6. Marcy Meyer says:

    This sounds interesting. Thanks for sharing.

  7. Sherry says:

    This sounds like a very interesting book.

  8. Bea LaRocca says:

    Thank you for sharing this sneak peek of selections from this poetry collection, I am looking forward to reading them all

  9. Piroska B says:

    The book sounds very interesting. Thanks!

  10. Wendy Hutton says:

    thanks this sounds pretty interesting

  11. David Hollingsworth says:

    Sounds like a very important read, not just for us LGBTQs, but for people who are willing to have an open mind.

  12. Lily Kwan says:

    This book looks very interesting. Thanks for sharing!

  13. Wendy Hutton says:

    this sounds pretty good

  14. Jon Heil says:

    Hope it does well!

  15. David Hollingsworth says:

    Congratulations on the book!

  16. Wendy Hutton says:

    congrats on the release

  17. Sherry says:

    congrats on the release
    sherry @ fundinmental

  18. Ann Fantom says:

    This sounds like an interesting book and I also like the cover.

  19. Wendy Hutton says:

    best success with your book

  20. Barbara Montag says:

    I so enjoyed reading this well done excerpt!
    Thank you for sharing this.

  21. Nancy P says:

    Pretty cover

  22. Wendy Hutton says:

    how long have you been writing

  23. Barbara Montag says:

    How many hours a day do you write?

  24. Wendy Hutton says:

    is there an author who inspires you

  25. Wendy Hutton says:

    this author is new to me

  26. Nancy says:

    When you were a child, what genres did you like to read?

  27. Thomas Gibson says:

    Congrats on your tour!

  28. Wendy Hutton says:

    congrats on the tour

  29. Wendy Hutton says:

    do you have a mentor

  30. Barbara Montag says:

    What age were you when you first started writing?

  31. Billie Williams says:

    Good luck on your release.

  32. Wendy Hutton says:

    thanks again for the giveaway, best of luck with the book

  33. Susan Smith says:

    This sounds like an interesting book. I like the cover.

  34. Daniel M says:

    looks like a fun one

  35. Barbara Montag says:

    How do you select the names of your characters?

  36. Stephanie Larison says:

    Sounds interesting, can’t wait to read it!

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