Ep 452: Adib Khorram and "The Breakup Lists" - podcast episode cover

Ep 452: Adib Khorram and "The Breakup Lists"

Apr 22, 202448 minSeason 9Ep. 452
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Episode description

Adib Khorram talks with Jeff about his new YA novel, "The Breakup Lists." He discusses what inspired the story of stage manager Jackson and swimmer-turned-actor Liam, including some elements that come from Adib's real life. We also find out about how Adib approached the deaf representation in the book, why he chose the plays he did to be staged within the book, and scenes that got left behind. Of course, Adib's got some great recommendations too.

Complete show notes for episode 452 along with a transcript of the show are at BigGayFictionPodcast.com.

Look for the next episode of Big Gay Fiction Podcast on April 8.

Big Gay Fiction Podcast is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find many more outstanding podcasts at frolic.media/podcasts!

Transcript

[Jeff:] Coming up on this episode, Adib Khorram  joins us to talk about "The Breakup Lists." Hello, Rainbow Romance Reader. Welcome to  episode 452 of the Big Gay Fiction Podcast, the show for avid readers and passionate  fans of queer romance fiction. I'm Jeff, and it's great to have you  here for another episode. Now before we get into my conversation with  Adib, I want to tell you briefly about a new

charity anthology that's coming out this Thursday,  April 26th. Thirteen authors have joined together for "Elite Connections." Let me just read you  this blurb to get you intrigued about this. Every need met. Every desire fulfilled. Welcome  to Elite Connections, the secret exclusive service where money is no object and your every  wish is guaranteed to come true. Fake dates, arranged marriages, or just some company  for the night, whatever it is, with Elite,

you are covered. "Elite Connections" is a  queer charity anthology containing MM, FF, and other LGBTQ+ romances, and it's  available for a limited time only. Now, if that didn't make you want to pick up a  copy, this should. The proceeds from the anthology are being split between two organizations  that do some incredible work. First is Outright International, an organization that  works to amplify inclusion and equality across

the world. And second is Lambda Legal, which  fights for the civil rights of LGBTQ+ people. This is a great lineup of authors too,  featuring Anna Ashley, BA Tortuga, Colette Davison, Emily Silver, Erin Zak, Jax  Calder, Kelex, Frances M. Thompson, Jodi Payne, Rhys Everly, Sarah Zane, Saxon James, and  V.L. Locey. I hope you'll pick up a copy of "Elite Connections" for some great stories and to  support these two organizations doing great work.

Now let's get into my conversation with a  Adib Khorram. Usually, I review the book before the interview, but we talk about absolutely  everything I love about "The Breakup Lists" in the interview. So, rather than being redundant,  I think we should just get right to it. I really loved talking to Adib about this book.  And the real life inspirations behind some aspects of the story. Adib's also got two more books  coming out this year, including his first adult

romance that we're gonna find out about. And  he's got some terrific recommendations too. [Jeff:] Adib, welcome to the show.  It is so exciting to have you here. [Adib:] Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here. [Jeff:] We've been thinking about having you, of  course, going back to "Darius the Great Is Not Okay," but then you came out with "The Breakup  Lists." This book and its theater kid scenario, kind of a "High School Musical" thing  overall going on. It's like, okay,

now's the time. Gotta have him here. Tell us  about this book and the story of Jackson and Liam.

[Adib:] Goodness. So "The Breakup Lists"  tells a story of Jackson Ghasnavi, who is an Iranian American, gay, deaf, stage  manager in his high school in Kansas City, Missouri, who's quite cynical and whose older  sister is constantly falling in and out of love and to help her cope and to give himself  some peace in life he's taken to making lists of all the faults of her most recent  exes which he calls his the breakup lists.

At the start of "The Breakup Lists" he meets  a, a boy named Liam. He has kind of known Liam cause Liam is a swimmer and Jackson's  best friend, Bowie is a swimmer. But Liam decides he's going to audition for the fall  musical even though he is never been a theater kid. And the theater kids tend to be a bit,  territorial. That's a nice way of putting it. [Jeff:] That's a good way to put it.

[Adib:] Indeed. But Jackson gets to know  Liam and gets to really like Liam about the same time that his sister Jasmine is  also getting to know Liam and falling in love with him. And so even though  Liam is dating his sister Jasmine, Jackson comes to realize that he  may also have a, a bit of a crush. And, geez, I don't know how far to go  into it. I feel like that's a good, like, top level pitch without spoiling any of the chaos  that ensues. But if you want me to go into the

chaos that ensues, I will. I just don't wanna  spoil things. I never know how much to pitch. [Jeff:] We'll, we'll get into some of  those deep dive things a little bit as go. [Adib:] Suffice it to say it is a  romance. So, you kind of know that Jackson and Liam are in fact going to end  up together at the other end of the mess. [Jeff:] Although… [Adib:] That's the rules of genre, I  don't make 'em, I just follow them.

[Jeff:] This is one of those books that people  on the show have heard me talk about it from time to time. It's like the mess is so big.  It’s like, I don't know how they're gonna come back from that to get to where I know they  have to go. And that's kind of my favorite, right? That I can't figure out how it's gonna  like put us all back together again. And also, one of those I just kept with, with Jackson going,  oh, don't do that. Don't, no, don't do that.

[Adib:] I feel like for me the best YA books  are the ones where we can see someone making the same mistakes we made at that age and  being like, oh, I a hundred percent understand why you're doing this. And I a hundred percent  wish I could just tell you to make a different choice. But I don't know. I think that's what  makes 'em real. cause we all have made those mistakes when we were younger. Sometimes  we still make those mistakes as an adult.

I often hear people say that they're like,  really don't like the miscommunication trope. And I'm like, listen, I'm almost  40 and I still sometimes miscommunicate with the people in my life. I get it. But  obviously not to yuck anyone's yum, or yum anyone's yuck. Like everyone is  allowed to like what they want to like. [Jeff:] You mentioned in the  acknowledgements that you were a theater kid. [Adib:] I was indeed. [Jeff:] Where are the parallels  between you and Jackson?

[Adib:] Goodness. You know, Jackson is not  me. Thank goodness. And he is not me in a lot of ways. But like Jackson, I was also a techie. I  was backstage. I actually got my college degree in lighting design. And though Jackson's very much  not me, I think I gave him some of what, with hindsight, I think were some of my rougher edges  from when I was a teenager. I was maybe a little bit on the judgmental side and maybe a little bit  of a grudge holder and maybe a little bit cynical.

And I think I gave those parts of myself, to Jackson. But he's also very much his own  person. He's self-possessed in a way that I wish I was when I was a teenager. He's  also out and queer, which I definitely could not be growing up in Kansas City in  the late nineties and early two thousands. So, in those ways I think he's very different  from me. But the love of theater that I had and still have, I think are very much a part of  him. And you know, as is the stage manager,

his job is not to be on stage. His job is to make  sure everything goes well. And I think that's part of who I was as a teenager and who I still am in  some ways as an adult, before being an author. I spent more than 10 years in the event production  industry in Kansas City, making live events happen for people. And so, I've always been, I think,  pretty good at keeping multiple plates spinning and you know, subsuming my own ego enough to let  someone else have the night be about them and

have a good time. And I think that's something I  gave to Jackson too, cause for all of his faults, and there are, there are numerous. I don't think  he's a very selfish person most of the time.

[Jeff:] I would agree with that. He really wants  things to go well for everybody. Mostly. I mean, he definitely has that like I want things  to go well for me, but you know, he wants the shows to go off well, and I certainly  having stage managed a few things myself, although as an adult, I certainly appreciate  all the things that has to go into, like, making that happen correctly and well night after night  after night, performance after performance. And

I thought that stuff was just brilliant. I could,  go Mm-Hmm. That, that, oh, the notebook. Mm-Hmm. [Adib:] Many, many of the hurdles he  faced were drawn from my own large repertoire of theater stories  as I think anyone who's been in theater for any amount of time  just has a bunch of weird stories. [Jeff:] The thing that I love most about Jackson,  and, and we'll see how not spoilerly we can kind of keep ourselves here, but just how much he  misses clues about how Liam feels about him.

Or sometimes he's like, cause Bowie will kind  of try to nudge him. He's like, no, no, no, no. It's like this guy's learning sign language for you. He's learning another language  for you. Please see that, you know. [Adib:] I think, for all of his self-confidence  and Jackson is pretty self-confident in a lot of ways, and self-assured. But he also is  insecure in a lot of ways and in particular in romance because he is been burned  quite badly by his only other experience.

And I think. This is something that I imagine  a lot of queer people have to grapple with when they were growing up, especially  my generation of not quite believing that you're deserving or worthy of love. And  I think that really comes through in Jackson that to admit that Liam might actually like  him means to admit that he's worthy of love and he has built his entire personality on  being cynical because he is not lovable, and he just doesn't know how to  accept that maybe he in fact is.

And so, it's much easier to be like it's all  in my head, it's wishful thinking. This is a normal bro behavior, even though  it's clearly not a bro behavior. [Jeff:] Clearly not. Clearly not. Did you have to fight with yourself a little bit  to let that play out as long as it did and to not kind of nudge it further. cause it's almost in a  lot of ways, a slow burn that's going on there. [Adib:] Actually, my editor had to  fight with me to make the book not

800 pages long because the burn was  slower to start with. And I was like, let me relish all of these little  hints and clues and Jackson being so, like blinded by what's going on and Liam being  so obvious and Jackson's still not getting it. And my editor's like, I love how self-indulgent  we're being, let's just rein it in a little

bit. We really want to hit, I don't remember  exactly what the page count is, but you know, usually however big the book is depends  on how it gets placed in libraries, how much it costs to print, et cetera, et cetera. And it's like, we really think this  is the sweet spot. So, you maybe just, just reigned it in just a little. Just a little.  And I did, and I do think the book is stronger for

it. Like I think it moves along at a nice  pace. And I don't think it feels rushed, but I think it has a certain urgency to it  that you want to know what happens next. [Jeff:] It was definitely a  page turner for me. It's like, oh, I just wanna read a little bit more  before I have to put it down for a bit, [Adib:] Which is good. you know, we can save all of the other slow  burn scenes for the director's cut.

[Jeff:] Exactly what I was thinking. Later on, this could have a special edition with  everything you wanted extra in it. Is there anything that got left on the  cutting room floor that you're like, oh, I wish that that thing could  have snuck its way back in.

[Adib:] One of the scenes I held onto  for probably longer than I should have, cause it just wasn't working was drawn from my own  theater days where Jackson and the other theater kids try to have a camp out outside the theater  teacher's house and the cops get called on them. And so, they end up decamping to a, like a,  a local park where they set up tents and, Jackson having never been camping before,  enters into an only one tent scenario with

Liam. It was tropey and fun and just didn't  quite work for the arc of their relationship or the arc of the plot. But it was very  fun and really just felt like the sort of misadventures that theater kids have because  I did in fact have such a misadventure when I was in high school. I'm definitely sad that  that one didn't survive the editorial process, but that just means I can put it in a  different book someday. Knock on wood.

[Jeff:] There you go. And now we all know it  too. It's like, oh, I can just work that into my own head story for those two on a thing  that didn't Actually show up in the book. I've gotta ask about these breakup  lists cause this is so unique that you've got somebody maintaining the lists for  somebody else. Not just somebody else going, I hate this person because of X, Y, Z. But having somebody maintain it for them,  almost like their social secretary in some

way. What was the inspiration for making  that kind of come about? And I know, cause you mentioned the acknowledgements  too, like leaning on some of the stuff with your sister a little bit too.  Were you, her social secretary? [Adib:] I'm only saying this because  my sister gave me permission to say this. I was her social secretary for one  particularly nasty breakup that she had.

Where she just was having a really  hard time getting over this guy, and so to make to make her laugh and cheer  her up, I just started inventing the most ridiculous faults I could for this guy.  Some of them were clearly not untrue or perhaps not even applicable to members of the  human species, but nonetheless, I would just make up the most ridiculous things about him,  and that always did get a laugh out of her.

And something that even now she's well and truly  over it and healed, but she will occasionally just like remember something I said and as  I was making this list of faults and just like crack herself up and we'll have a good  laugh about it. And I was describing this to another one of my author friends and they're  like, that's kind of a fun hook for a book. And I'm like, oh my God, you're right. I  cannot write this book without getting my

sister's permission first. And so,  she did thankfully give it. And so, it spiraled out of, you know, I did this one time  for one guy. Well, what if it's someone you know, what if it's a character doing it for like every  guy because their sister is a serial dater? And then of course the, the, the  logical conclusion was well what if he has a hard time making a  list because he likes the guy that he's making one for. And that was  really the seed of the entire novel.

[Jeff:] Interesting how many lists that he had  to keep because she is that serial dater. And I love how it's represented in the book in places  too. And even some of the ways that his internal monologue works because there are places that  you can see in the book like where things are scratched out and something else is like written  next to it or just crossed out. Or as he's editing his own thoughts, even crosses it out. Here's  what I'm really thinking or saying or whatever.

It's a very interesting device that I can't  remember seeing anywhere quite like that before. To see that level of like character  self-editing in the monologues, if you will. [Adib:] Thank you. I definitely, I wish I  knew where that came from. I tend to write by the seat of my pants when I'm kind of deepest  into my writing. I do sometimes outline things as necessary. But I'm like at my happiest when  I can just kind of sit down and write. And so,

I don't always know where things came from. And  that emerged pretty organically early on that I'm like, oh, Jackson is afraid to say what he really  thinks. So, he's constantly censoring himself. I wanna say it was my agent who said that  there are other books that have done similar, but it's been a while since we've  had a book that use it similarly. And so hopefully everyone will have  forgotten all of the others and think I'm a genius. And I'm like, yes,  please, that would be wonderful.

But it definitely, it was just a lot of  fun being like, let me make him as mean as he can possibly be. And then he's just, he  redacted that, and here's the milder version. And I think with queer people and with people  of color and with disabled people often we're filing off little edges of ourselves to make  ourselves more palatable to other people. And so having kind of done it on a whim, I'm  like, oh, this feels a little too real,

but now I have to do it. because it just felt  like something a lot of us have experienced. [Jeff:] It was really a wonderful reading  experience to see all of those elements of Jackson, like the, what I really wanna say  and then even redacting it almost to himself, like lessening what he'd said  in his mind a little bit too. And I just wanted to hug him so much  and just say like, this is all okay. The deaf representation you've got here  with Jackson is something that kind of

blew me away in the book. Listeners to  the podcast know that I work. in digital accessibility so I am considering these  elements all the time and working with people who are in the disabled community.  And I've heard people discuss deafness and loss of hearing with needing to turn hearing  aids off cause it gets to be too much trying to process and the effort in trying  to process, even with hearing aids.

And then I love how in the dialogue portions,  if Jackson's not hearing correctly. It just is like "something, something"  just written in the dialogue. So, you know as the reader that something  happened that he didn't understand. First of all, thank you for putting that  in the book, cause while I'm not deaf or hard of hearing myself, I certainly  appreciate the representation that people are gonna see themselves in this book  in a way that they may not have elsewhere.

What kind of help and support and research did  you do to be able to write that with what, again, appears only to me as a non-deaf person,  to be some really excellent representation. [Adib:] Thank you. I am also not deaf  or hard of hearing. When I was younger, I did speech therapy. It turns out turns out  they were trying to get rid of my gay voice, but at the time they thought I had a speech  impediment and made me go to speech therapy

for like six months. And several of the  other kids in there were deaf and hard of hearing. So that, that was like my  first introduction to that community. But it's not what I'm part of. And as a  writer you know, my thinking around who gets to tell what stories is constantly  evolving and these days I find myself feeling like at the end of the day we  have to make more space than we take. Early on I envisioned Jackson as deaf. There  are people in my life that are deaf or hard of

hearing. Some of them are minors and I'm not  going to talk about them. But suffice it to say people I care about very much are deaf for  hard of hearing, and I was cognizant that while representation of deaf folks is increasing in  children's literature, it's still not a whole lot.

And almost all that I could find was by white  authors. And it's exciting that we're getting more books by deaf creators like Sophie Lang and  Anna Sortino, who both have Sophie's debut is this year and then Anna's sophomore novel comes  out this year both with deaf protagonists, written by deaf authors and certainly in the,  the adult space deaf writers have been writing. So, I felt like there was enough other  books out there that I could join in and

make some room rather than taking it up. And  hopefully that will end up being the case. But as far as research aside from talking  to the deaf folks in my life. I did read as much literature by deaf people as  I could find. One of my favorites was actually Sara Novic's "True Biz," which was  recommended to me by my friend who's a CODA, a child of deaf adults, because their  mother read it. And I was like, oh my God,

this book is amazing. You have to read  it. And so down the chain, it came to me. I also watched one of my favorite pieces of deaf  media I watched was "Deaf U," the documentary on Netflix about Gallaudet University.  That was really fun. And then I also, as many writers, worked with an authenticity reader to find basically all the points of  ignorance I had that I butted up against. I went into writing with the philosophy that it's  not my job to put my thumb on a pain point that

I don't share in. And so, in earlier versions  there was less of Jackson hearing "something, something" and there was less of him  being frustrated with his family's unwillingness to learn sign language, and  the reader said something to the effect of, basically it felt almost idealized that he wasn't  more frustrated with what was going on around him. And so, then I had to make the decision of like, how honest do I need to be here to accurately  represent his reality? Without, again,

just jabbing a pain point that's not mine.  And I think with the help of that reader and with the help of my editor, I, I hope I've  done it justice and come to a happy place. But at the end of the day, I'm human and we all  make mistakes sometime. And so, I hope if I did make any mistakes, they're minor and don't cause  any harm, cause that's certainly not my goal. Oh my God. That was really  rambly. I hope that made sense.

[Jeff:] It did make sense. And I hope,  like you, that there aren't mistakes there that you weren't aware of and didn't  surface. It'll be interesting as this gets out into people's hands to see how all  that resonates with people. And I hope it resonates for them in a good way cause  I like seeing that kind of representation, knowing the work that I do and how, how little  representation there can be in certain spaces.

[Adib:] I hope so too. And I hope you know, I hope young deaf readers and young deaf readers  of color will see the book and be like, oh, I get to write about my own experiences too,  and that it will open doors and not close them. [Jeff:] Yeah. Absolutely. I have to say over on, on the theater  geeking-out side, I very much wanna see

the version of "Jesus Christ Superstar" that  you've portrayed in this book. I have been through versions of "JCS" that I both adore how  they do things and other ones where I'm like, how did you decide to do that thing? I wanna  see the thing that you did in that book. So, if you ever put that on  somewhere, let me know where. [Adib:] Oh no, I won't. It  did happen in real life. [Jeff:] It did?

[Adib:] And the company did get fined  for veering too far from Andrew Lloyd Weber's vision and lost a huge  chunk of their season's budget. [Jeff:] Oh my gosh. I'm sad  that I missed that somewhere. [Adib:] Indeed. For those listeners  who haven't read the book yet, the version of "Jesus Christ Superstar"  that Jackson's teacher decides to mount is one that leans really heavily into  the homoerotic, subtexts of Jesus and

Judas. And that was very much based on a  production I was tangentially involved with, in which those same choices were made and  cost the theater company a lot of money. [Jeff:] Wow. you always hear about  those things that kind of happen when they veer too far off. And to know  that this was real, it's like, wow. [Adib:] And I feel comfortable saying  this. It was an adult theater company, not a children's theater. And so, I will say  that was definitely the sexiest that "Jesus

Christ superstar" has ever been. The guy that  had playing Jesus was a very attractive man. [Jeff:] Nice. And so, I guess... I was gonna  ask why did you choose JCS and I'm guessing that that whole incident might have been one  of the reasons it made its way into the book. [Adib:] It actually was the last reason I  picked "Jesus Christ Superstar." I really picked it, primarily because in,  in earlier versions of the book,

betrayal was perhaps a larger theme that  ended up being in the final version. And so, it felt thematically appropriate to have them  be doing "Jesus Christ Superstar," especially when they later go on to do "Twelfth Night,"  which is about... am I allowed to cuss on this? [Jeff:] Oh, absolutely. [Adib:] It's about gender fuckery and  siblings. And I'm like, yes. Also, a big theme. I'm a genius. These are illusions.  Oh my, God. English teachers are gonna be obsessed

with me. But so, once I had the idea that I  wanted to, to be something about betrayal, I'm like, well, I know I had this  one hilarious production of "Jesus Christ Superstar" I was once involved  in. That'll be hilarious and great. And so. once I had made the decision, I very much leaned into it and enjoyed  getting to use this part of my past. [Jeff:] That's awesome. I love that so, so  much. And I mean, even still there's some

big betrayal that goes on in this book. All I'll  say is as things start to kind of come together, Jackson's sister like just blew my  mind with the lengths that she went on some of what she did. And that's all  I'll say on that, but it's like, whoa! [Adib:] It felt like that was the only choice  she really could make for the narrative to have meaning and to feel satisfying, like she had  to do what she did. But I did not have a lot

of fun. I don't like writing people being  mean. I had a really hard time. That was really one of the last pieces of the book to  fall in place was kind of Jasmine getting even with Jackson for stealing her boyfriend even  though they had already broken up beforehand. And yeah, it's been interesting. I've  started seeing kind of early responses to the book from people and Jasmine has  been an a more polarizing character than

I had expected. I think she's delightful and  hilarious, and I feel like we all know or knew when we were teenagers that one person who  literally is just has to be in a relationship. And so, I, I find her very human and endearing  in a way, even as she's messy. And some people are like, she's unlikeable. And then I'm  like is this misogyny at work or is this just people like seeing a little too much of  themselves in the character and being like,

no. Like, I don't know, maybe people  doth protest too much. You never know. [Jeff:] She was interesting. She's the character  I had the most difficulty with... just like, why are you putting your brother  through this thing with the lists? That's kind of where I was with  it. I, mean, it wasn't like that she was completely unlikable. It's just like, why  aren't you keeping your own lists kind of thing?

[Adib:] To be fair, that dynamic is  just as much Jackson who is like, let me tell you what's wrong with your boyfriends. [Jeff:] That's very true. [Adib:] Jackson does like listing people's faults. [Jeff:] You have a lot of subplots in this  book. I mean, you've got everything with... [Adib:] There used to be more.  My editor made me tear them down. [Jeff:] I can only imagine the sub  plots that are in the director's cut,

but I mean you've got everything with Jackson's  sister. There's stuff with the school's GSA, which we haven't even really touched on  here, but some things going on there. Jackson's friend Bowie, who I would love to  see an entire book about, college application and decision time staging two plays. How did you  and your editor kind of bring all this into the package that it became? And how long did it take?  It feels like this book might have taken a while.

[Adib:] It definitely took, I think,  four good rounds of edits. Plus, pretty substantive line edits. I would say  generally I tended to write too much. I got too in the weeds with subplots. And so, it  was basically constantly my editor reigning me in and saying, remember this is a romance  or a romantic comedy, depending who you ask. We're going to be here for three hours if we try  to define what a romance versus a romantic comedy

is, to the dissatisfaction of everyone on the  planet. And I'm not sure it's actually possible. But because it's a romance, you know,  the thrust has to be thrust. Well, that's a different romance. But the point of the  story has to be Jackson and Liam. And so yes,

make sure all the other characters  have rich internal lives. But if they're distracting from will Jackson  and Liam have a happy ever after or not, then we gotta either cut it or trim it down  to use it kind of as breathing room for when Jackson and Liam are getting too intense. Let's  go follow someone else for a little while. It really was just a constant matter of  pruning really. I rarely added to the subplots. It was usually trim the  subplot to have a little more room

to flesh out something between Jackson  and Liam. And it was a real challenge, but like it was a good challenge. It made me  really consider how much space I was giving on the page to any given subplot and how to do  as much as I could with as little page space as I could. And I'm always a fan of scenes  that can do more than one thing at a time.

This book and my editor Ellen, really like,  made me do that a lot, which I think at the end of the day was good for me as a writer to  have some bumpers to go up against, as it were. [Jeff:] Has the, this method where you've  got too much in it then have to pair back, is that kind of common for what  happens when you write? Or did book just kind of bring more  out of you and story to tell? [Adib:] I think usually I end up writing a little  bit short or writing just about the right amount,

and therefore it's just kind of a matter  of shuffling. This one I definitely wrote too much. I think part of it is because it  was characters I loved so much and you know, a topic and a piece of my life that I loved so  much that it was a very self-indulgent writing process because it's part of my life that I  love and that I had endless funny stories.

And so, I just put like all of the funny  stories from my theater days into it and, part of the editing process was just being  like, which ones are the funniest and which ones actually drive the plot forward or are  so funny we'd have to leave them anyway. The constant writing advice is to kill your  darlings. And I always give myself the power to pardon one darling per book that I just  keep it in there because it makes me happy. [Jeff:] What got pardoned for this one?

[Adib:] Oh my gosh. I knew you were gonna ask that  as soon as I said that aloud and I can't remember. [Jeff:] Oh, I couldn't let it go. [Adib:] I know, right? Well, the problem is  like, I finished the book like last year, like when I'm done with it and  then when it actually comes out. There's such a gap that sometimes  I forget. What did... oh my gosh. Okay. Actually, one of the darlings I did,  pardon was, was actually keeping them doing

two plays. The question was that was like,  can I combine it into one? I was like, no, no. I think they needed to do a  fall musical and a spring play. and so that meant I had to work  harder to make it work. Which is sometimes the compromise is you can keep  the startling, but you have to earn it. And I do think I earned that. Like I think  it works the way it turned out though.

[Jeff:] I can't imagine it another way because  the black moments happen shortly after JCS and kinda leaning into the next show, and  you needed the space for all of the things that went so wrong to eventually  work themselves out. And if you'd like, solved it sooner I think it would've  been felt like, well, why did we just rush all of that. It's what it needed to  tell its story, at least in my opinion. [Adib:] I was, I was, I was happy with how  it turned out. It definitely took a while

to get there, but I was very happy  with how the book turned out. And, really grateful to Ellen for making  me stretch and making me make it good. [Jeff:] Given your love of these  characters, do you think you might revisit at some point? Like I said, I  want a book about Bowie really badly. [Adib:] You know, I never say never. For  me, I like, I always have to have a story

to tell. I feel like if there's not a story  there, then in a way it feels like writing fan fiction of my own characters, which  feels... not that there's anything wrong with fan fiction. But writing fan fiction of  your own characters feels self-indulgent to me. And in some ways like diminishing the role  of, and the joy of fan fiction. Like one of the joys of fan fiction is filling in the gaps or  imagining how the story goes on after the end.

And I feel like if I'm going to tell you what  happens after the end by writing another book, it has to be a good story worthy of being  told or there's no point to doing it. So, all of which to just say, if I ever  come up with the right story for them, and also someone buys it, then I would  absolutely write about them again. [Jeff:] We talked about something that  was on the cutting room floor that you wish it could come back in. But what's  a favorite scene in the final book?

[Adib:] I mean, one of my favorite small  interactions comes at a holiday meal where Jackson's dad, who's Iranian American  and is really bad at cooking vegetables, wants Jackson to come check the  carrots he's cooking. And he is like, do you think they're cooked  enough? And Jackson's like, how long have they been in this boiling water?  And he is like, about 45 minutes. And Jackson touches the carrot and it just like dissolves  in the water. And he's like, yep, they're dead.

I think that was really funny because  I feel like a lot of Iranian American children come from families that have  tended to murder vegetables. We all make fun of our parents for overcooking  vegetables and so that's a favorite scene. I also think, I don't know, Liam has this  habit of tucking in Jackson's t-shirt tags

cause I always end up sticking up. And I feel  like every time I got to write Liam doing that, I was like, oh, like that was my  favorite thing to do was just let me show Liam being tender to this boy who is  all bristles and like get through his shell. That was really fun. because I think  it's... I don't know. It's nice to write about queer characters  falling in love and nice to write about a queer character being  shown that they're worthy of love.

[Jeff:] And Liam, in all of his, just  kindness. I mean, I don't feel like there's an evil bone really in, in Liam's  person. He's just, he's nice and he's kind, and he wants to do right by people and do  right by himself. And so of course he's gonna tuck that tag in and it was just like, I  loved it. Every time I read it, it's like, aw.

[Adib:] I was like, yes, psychological  gesture. Excellent. You know, we talked, me and my editor talked a lot about  like Liam and make sure like, yes, he is perfect, but also, he is very imperfect. And one of the things I actually struggled  with during the editing process was how to

get across that like, yeah, he's great.  Yeah, he's kind, but he is also kind of a people pleaser and like how to show him  growing through that and like learning to take care of himself in a way that was  possible when we were a hundred percent in Jackson's head. And, like that was a  great challenge. But one I hope I rose to.

[Jeff:] I think you did. I could think  of a couple scenes, and I won't give them away where you see Liam, have to take  that leap into a little personal growth, with how he's handling a few different  things that crop up along the way. It occasionally made me wonder like...  this could be an interesting two person POV. But on the other hand, I  like just being with Jackson too.

[Adib:] I think it would've been  interesting, but I think Jackson's personality is just a little too strong  to share the page with someone else. [Jeff:] I could just envision  Jackson somewhere in your head going, what are you doing? No, no. This is my book. [Adib:] Exactly. [Jeff:] You've got a couple more books coming  out this year. It's a busy year for you. There's a picture book and a romantic comedy. You could  try to define romantic comedy, maybe with that.

[Adib:] I'm not even, I'm not gonna try. [Jeff:] What can you tell us about these two? [Adib:] So, yeah, so the picture book is  called "Bijan Always Wins," and it comes out in July. And it's about a little boy named  Bijan. who basically makes everything in his life a competition to be won. And then ends up  just really making everyone in his life really, really mad. And it's illustrated by  Michelle Tran, who just did a fantastic job,

like entirely throughout. It's such  a fun, cute, but funny and whimsical picture book. I'm really excited for it.  And if you're wondering if I, as a child, I also was overly competitive. I don't remember  anymore. I was too, that's too long ago now. I'm actually, in addition to having three books  out this year, not to age myself, but I'm turning 40 this year as well. So, it's like the year of  Adib. in fact, actually maybe that's a branding

opportunity. I should go with the year people  and see if we can make it the year of a Adib. [Jeff:] Absolutely. [Adib:] Or just smack my, like, put a sticker of  my face over a dragon and that way it can like, do double duty. And then my, my  debut adult romance is called,

"I'll Have What He's Having" and it  comes out in September. And it's about an Iranian American man named Farzan who  lives in Kansas City, and he and his two Iranian American gay best friends from high  school are still like best friends forever. When Farzan goes to restaurants,  sometimes he uses the name Frank Allen, cause his real name is Farzan Alavi.  But when you try to make a reservation, sometimes people are like, what? And so,  his white person name is Frank Allen.

And so, after getting dumped by a guy that he'd  been on three dates with and is about to like start, finally like, he's having this guy over.  He is gonna cook for a man. Maybe they're gonna Netflix and chill afterward. But the guy's  like, I'm not feeling it and cancels on him. And so Farzan goes to a restaurant he's wanting  to try and gives his white person named Frank Allen for the reservation. Forgetting that  Frank Allen is also the name of like a famous

restaurant critic in Kansas City. Not in real  life, but in the Kansas City of the book. And so, the sommelier at this restaurant named David,  who is studying for his master sommelier test, he's like, oh crap, a critic's coming.  I gotta roll out the red carpet for him. So, he starts basically giving  Farzan a lot of free food, and a lot of free wine. And Farzan  thinks David is flirting with him,

and David thinks Farzan slash Frank is  flirting with him. So, they end up going home and sleeping together, and then the next  morning realizing that it was all a mistake. David is studying for his sommelier test, which  is very stressful. And Farzan has just agreed to take over his family's Persian restaurant  in Kansas City even though he doesn't know how to run a restaurant. And so, they're like,  ah, what if you help me study for my test and

I help you learn how to run a restaurant? And  also, we bone sometimes. Surely, we won't catch any feelings. This is a purely professional  transaction. We're just letting off stress. Of course, naturally they do catch feelings.  Drama ensues. But there's a lot of wine and a lot of boning and I would say it's  maybe like four chili peppers on a, on a scale of five. I know everyone has their  versions of what that is. Suffice it to say,

it's not a children's book.  Very much not a children's book. [Jeff:] What led you to get into adult romance after doing some picture  books and some YA along the way? [Adib:] I think probably like a lot  of people I had a hard time reading any books for pleasure during the  kind of worst parts of the pandemic, and so I started reading basically exclusively  adult romance cause I'm like, ah, this will be

happy. And it's about people falling in love and  boning. None of which I'm able to do during the pandemic because I was single at the start of the  pandemic and like, I didn't need any pandem-dick. You know, growing up I read romance some. Usually  by appropriating various family members Harlequin novels, because certainly as a closeted gay boy,  you're not supposed to be reading romance. So,

it was a genre I always loved and appreciated.  Reading a bunch of it in 2020 and 2021, like I was reading queer romances and romances by authors of  color, which weren't around when I was growing up. Or at least I'm sure they were around, but I was  not exposed to them, and they were harder to find. And I was just reading so many of 'em and  loving them. But at the same time, there weren't a whole lot of traditionally published  romances by queer men of color. There were some,

and there are more now than there were, but I was  like, hmm, none of these are by gay Iranians. So, at least none of the ones I could find. I  think there probably are some romance is such a big genre and certainly the presence  of indie romance is a beautiful thing. But it makes it hard to know if what  you want actually exists and it's hard to find or if it doesn't exist. So, I won't  ever, I won't claim that I'm the first gay

Iranian man to be writing queer romances. But  I wasn't finding a lot of it. And I was like, I should write romances about people like me. And then separate to that, I also,  helped two different friends move house on two different days.  And then my body was destroyed, and I drank a bottle of wine and ate a  pizza by myself. And then I was like, man,

I should go to Italy. And so, I booked myself a  trip to Italy and then sobered up and I was like, emailed my agent Molly, and I was like, dear  Molly, I'm going to Italy, and I need to make this a write off. What if one of my romances  is set in Italy? And she was like, great. So, book two is set in Italy. It's three  books by the way. Three books for three friends. The Middle one is in Italy to  make my trip to tax write off. Also,

I'm not a tax professional. Don't take tax  advice from me on what to do if you go to Italy. [Jeff:] But a great way to make Italy  work for you. That was wonderful. Three books, three romance  books coming. That's exciting. [Adib:] Yep, yep. Fall 2024,  fall 2025, and fall 2026. So, I'm kind of, I'm deep in edits on  the, on the second one right now. [Jeff:] Do you see for the future, just kind  of going back and forth a little bit between

writing young adult and, and also writing adult  romance? Or is this more of a transition perhaps? [Adib:] I think so. I love writing for young  people. They're endlessly fascinating and in a lot of ways every experience for them is a  first. And so, when I get to write about their experiences. I get to kind of rediscover things  for myself, and that's incredibly fulfilling. And I also think even though queer  literature has come a long way,

there's always room for more. And I think with  the current climate in the United States around access to books for young people, it's more  important than ever that we let young people and young queer people know that there's  a future out there for them and there is a world that will welcome them despite what  the ugliest adults in their lives are saying. And so, yeah, I think I'm gonna keep writing  both. But on the other hand, I've had so much

fun writing adult romance that I would love to do  more if they'll let me. I already have ideas for more books, different scenarios, different  tropes that I haven't gotten to get into, but want to get into. So yeah, I can see  myself doing both as long as they'll let me. [Jeff:] That's exciting. Oh, I'm looking forward  to the fall to check out the, the adult romance, especially four chili pepper, spicy cause you're  certainly not writing that in young adult.

[Adib:] No. Right. I haven't put any pole  in hole in any of my young adult books, and I can't imagine myself doing that.  But this is an adult book and I'm like, yep, they're just gonna get a little messy. [Jeff:] We do love to get recommendations on  this show. So, what are you reading or watching, or even, what theater have you been to recently  that you wanna tell our listeners to check out?

[Adib:] Oh goodness. Okay. So, like every  other person that's ever done this podcast, as soon as you ask the question, I immediately  forgot every book I have ever read in my life. [Jeff:] Oh yeah. [Adib:] I had a list next to me. I had a  list prepared in case this came up. So, I recently I've read Julian Winters adult  romance debut, "I Think They Love You," which is delightful and amazing. I recently read  Martha Wells "System Collapse," the latest

in the "Murderbot" novellas. I recently  read Natalie C. Parker's "Assassin's Guide to Babysitting," a YA queer adventure about  assassins trying to kill a babysitter who's also an assassin. To be clear, they're  all assassins. It's great and delightful. And I've also been re-reading  Rebekah Weatherspoon's "Rafe: A Buff Male Nanny," which is just one  of my favorite romances of all time. Also, theater wise, I mean, I think it  closed now, but if you have a time machine,

go back in time and see "Some Like it Hot" on  Broadway. It's the queerest most delightful musical I've ever seen in my life. I saw  it three times. I'm just obsessed with it. It was so perfect and everything you would  want writers to do to a movie about white men dressing up as women to escape mobsters in  a movie in the fifties. Like everything you'd want them to do to update that to be relevant to  today. They did and more. It was so great. So,

if it goes on tour, if they ever remount  it, go see "Some Like it Hot." It's great. And then my other obsession has been  "Baldur's Gate 3," which I think I'm coming up on 400 hours of playtime on. I'm on  my third and a half play through right now. I'm finally doing a dark urge run and I made my  dark urge so sexy. It's terrible. I'm like,

oh no. Oh no. He's so attractive. What  happened? And it's funny cause in the character creator sometimes you like  think, ah, this person's gonna be hot and then you see them in the in-game lighting  and you're like, oh, you're look kind of weird. This time I thought they looked kind  of weird in the character creator, but then once it's in the game  lighting, I'm like, oh no. So, I've just, I've sabotaged myself. It's  such a good game though. It's so good.

[Jeff:] That is some great stuff there.  I'm so excited for Julian's adult romance debut cause I love everything he writes,  and I can't wait to get a hold of that. And I'm so annoyed that I didn't get  to "Some Like it Hot" before it closed. [Adib:] I am so sorry. It was so good. [Jeff:] Yeah. I was thrilled that  they won a Grammy for cast recording.

[Adib:] Oh, that's great. I was so happy that  J. Harrison Ghee won. Them and Alex Newell tied for being the first non-binary performers  to win Tony's and I was so thrilled for that. [Jeff:] Adib, this has been such a wonderful  conversation. As we wrap up, tell everybody the best places to keep up with you online so that  they can know what all of your new books are coming out and the other things you may be doing  as "The Breakup Lists" comes out into the world.

[Adib:] Yeah. First of all, Jeff, thank you  for having me. It's been a pleasure. Assuming there is social, still social media by the time  this podcast comes out and given how many temper tantrums Elon Musk seems to throw, who knows  what the answer will be? I am on Instagram and I usually forget to post unless it's a picture  of my food. @adibkhorram, I'm also on Blue Sky, which is I think my new Twitter. I feel like  half of book world went to Threads and the

other half went to Blue Sky and I was on the  Blue Sky side. cause I don't like Meta very much. But also @adibkhorram. I have a website,  adibkhorram.com. And I actually have a monthly newsletter that I've been sending out I think for  the last two or two and a half years every month, which I'm very proud of myself cause that's  a very impressive consistency rate for me.

But yeah, I'm really lucky in some ways  that I have a name that not a whole lot of other authors have, and so I didn't have to do anything weird to my name to get it  on every social media that I wanted. Also, if you love "Star Trek" or "The  Untamed" or random cultural musings, I do also have a Tumblr and it's basically  all "Star Trek" and "The Untamed" because those are my great loves. So, and  that's also adibkhorram.tumblr.com.

[Jeff:] Fantastic. We will link to all of  that in the show notes along with all the other things that we talked about in the show.  Thank you so much for being here. I've enjoyed this conversation so, so much. Wish you  all the success with "The Breakup Lists." [Adib:] Thank you very much. I had a blast. [Jeff:] This episode's transcript has  been brought to you by our community on Patreon. If you'd like to read  the conversation for yourself,

check out the show notes page for this episode  at BigGayFictionPodcast.com. And of course, we've got links to everything that we've  talked about in this episode there too. And thanks so much to Adib for talking  to us about "The Breakup Lists." I really cannot recommend this book highly enough.  I also cannot wait for the fall release of, " I'll Have What He's Having"  because that sounds so incredible.

All right, that's gonna do it for now. Coming up  on Monday, May 6th, Cat Sebastian's gonna be here to talk to us about her new book "You Should be  So Lucky," which features a romance set in 1960 between a baseball player who's in a slump, and  the reporter who's been assigned to write about him. It's such a great book and a wonderful  conversation. You are not gonna wanna miss it.

Thank you so much for listening  and I hope you'll be back here soon for more discussions about the  kinds of stories that we all love, the big gay fiction kind. Until then,  keep turning those pages and keep reading. [Will:] Big Gay Fiction Podcast is part of  the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more shows you’ll love at frolic.media/podcasts.  Original theme music by Daryl Banner.

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