Iย KNOW WHAT YOUโRE THINKING.ย THIEF. PLAGIARIZER. AND PERHAPS, because all
bad things must be racially motivated,ย Racist.
Hear me out.
Itโs not so awful as it sounds.
Plagiarism is an easy way out, the way you cheat when you canโt string words together on your own. But what I did was notย easy. I did rewrite most of the book. Athenaโs early drafts are chaotic, primordial, with half-finished sentences littered all over the place. Sometimes I couldnโt even tell where she was going with a paragraph, so I excised it completely. Itโs not like I took a painting and passed it off as my own. I inherited a sketch, with colors added only in uneven patches, and finished it according to the style of the original. Imagine if Michelangelo left huge chunks of the Sistine Chapel unfinished. Imagine if Raphael had to step in and do the rest.
This whole project is beautiful, in a way. A never-before-seen kind of literary collaboration.
And so what if it was stolen? So what if I lifted it wholesale?
Athena died before anyone knew the manuscript existed. It would never have been published, or if it had, in its current state, it would always have been known as Athenaโs half-finished manuscript, as overhyped and disappointing as F. Scott Fitzgeraldโsย The Last Tycoon. I gave it a chance to go out into the world without the judgment that multiple authorship always entails. And for all the work I put into it, all those hours of effortโwhy shouldnโt it be my name on the title?
Athena is, after all, thanked in the acknowledgments. My treasured friend. My greatest inspiration.
And maybe Athena would have even wanted this. She was always into trippy literary hoaxes like this. She loved talking about how James Tiptree Jr. had fooled people into thinking she was a man, or how so many readers still think Evelyn Waugh was a woman. โPeople come to a text with so many prejudices formed by what they think they know about the author,โ sheโs said before. โI sometimes wonder how my work would be received if I pretended to be a man, or a white woman. The text could be exactly the same, but one might be a critical bomb and the other a resounding success. Why is that?โ
So perhaps we can view this as Athenaโs great literary prank, as my complicating the reader-author relationship in a way that will provide juicy fodder for scholars for decades to come.
Okayโperhaps that last one is a bit of a stretch. And if this sounds like me assuaging my own conscienceโfine. Iโm sure youโd rather believe I spent those few weeks tortured, that I struggled constantly with my guilt.
But the truth is, I was too excited.
For the first time in months, I was happy about writing again. I felt like Iโd been given a second chance. I was starting to believe in the dream again
โthat if you hone your craft and tell a good story, the industry will take care of the rest. That all you have to do is put a pen to paper, that if you work hard enough and write well enough, the Powers That Be will transform you overnight into a literary star.
Iโd even begun toying around with some of my old ideas. They felt fresh now, vivid, and I could think of a dozen new directions in which to take them. The possibilities felt endless. It was like driving a new car or working on a new laptop. Iโd somehow absorbed all the directness and verve of Athenaโs writing. I felt, as Kanye put it, harder, better, faster, and stronger. I felt like the kind of person who now listened to Kanye.
I once went to a talk by a successful fantasy writer where she claimed her fail-safe for getting over writerโs block was to read a hundred or so pages of very good prose. โIt makes my fingers itch to see a good sentence,โ sheโd said. โIt makes me want to imitate the same.โ
Thatโs precisely how I felt about editing Athenaโs work. She made me a better writer. It was eerie, how quickly I absorbed her skill; as if upon death, all that talent needed to go somewhere, and ended up right inside me.
I felt like now I was writing for both of us. I felt like I was carrying on the torch.
Is that justification enough for you? Or are you still convinced that Iโm some racist thief?
Fine. Hereโs how I really felt, when things came down to it.
At Yale, I once dated a graduate student in the philosophy department who did population ethics. He wrote papers on thought experiments so implausible that I often thought he would have been better off writing science fictionโwhether we have obligations to future, unborn peoples, for example, or whether you can desecrate bodies if it will cause no harm to the living. Some of his arguments were a little extremeโhe didnโt think, for instance, that there is any moral obligation to follow wills of the deceased if there is an overriding interest in redistributing wealth elsewhere, or that there are strong moral objections to using cemetery grounds for, say, housing for the poor. The general theme of his research was under what circumstances someone counts as a moral agent that deserves consideration. I didnโt understand much of his work, but his central argument was quite compelling: we owe nothing to the dead.
Especially when the dead are thieves and liars, too.
And fuck it, Iโll just say it: taking Athenaโs manuscript felt like reparations, payback for the things that Athena took from me.