Dreadnought: The Quest for Cringe - White-Kettle-Shufflepunk reads a trans YA superhero novel

What kind of teen (or "young adult") would read this?

Does no one in this universe ever had the power to transform in other people and decided to transform into the opposite sex?

Danny uses the lie of "a villain did it" - could he not tell his father to tell that to the school? So his dad could continue to pretend his son has a bad case of AGP?
 
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Your mistake is expecting logic in a tranny validation YA novel.

Since he's been exposed to superhero authorities now, wouldn't one of them contact his father and let him know "hey, we might know a super-scientist that can resolve this, do you want to book an appointment"? He's still legally a child.
 
Reader mail! Just stumbled upon this thread. This book gives such a fascinating peek into the tranny psyche, however what's especially compelling in this last chapter is the treatment Danny's father receives. I know people have brought it up before but it just boggles my mind.

Let's play along for a moment and pretend that Danny is a totes valid transbian and becoming a real girl is the greatest thing to ever happen to him. How the fuck is his father supposed to know this without being told? Why is he being presented as the one in the wrong? What's the acceptable reaction to having your teenage son get transmogrified into the opposite sex by a magic orb? "Oh well, guess it can't be helped"? Why is Danny so hesitant to "come out" to him anyway, when he already passes flawlessly as a girl?

Is he just meant to immediately figure out that this is what his son wanted this whole time? Is one of Dreadnought's powers having a superhuman persecution complex?

All this would make slightly more sense if Danny's father was shown actually being abusive at any point, but he isn't. His only crime thus far is not somehow detecting his son's trannyism via psychic link, and yet the author writes out a massive rant about how horrible he is as if that didn't totally come out of nowhere. Really, it's a perfect demonstration of how trans people are encouraged to cut people out of their lives over the mildest perceived slight.

Thanks for the reading. I'm resisting the urge to seek out this book myself and read ahead.
 
Not to mention the whole "looking at his mom and sussing out she's abused, too". Are we sure he isn't projecting?

Oh god, no, that part's setting up that mom is secretly a lesbian and she's going to run off and marry her "twu love". It's staggering how predictable that kind of thing is.
 
All this would make slightly more sense if Danny's father was shown actually being abusive at any point, but he isn't.
Reading reviews on Goodreads is really funny

There are some people that apparently loved the book but are mad that their stunning and brave transbian is living through anything negative! Oh the horror of experiencing a single negative emotion beside constant euphoria!! The fact that the father does not immediately become a validation machine makes him an abusive asshole, that is enough in their eyes

(Other more sane reviews rightfully point out that the father is a puzzling character as his being physically "abusive" is never shown, which raises questions on whether he is actually a bad character.)


Btw, all the negative reviews I have seen point out how flat the characters are, which has been also the criticism in this thread. Nothing to do with the identity of the author, just his terrible world and character building.
 
Does no one in this universe ever had the power to transform in other people and decided to transform into the opposite sex?

Danny does mention a historical MTF trans superhero in book 2. We don't know if that involved magical gender-bending, though. Plus, given the track record of trans historiography, I wouldn't be surprised if he was just a gay fella who fought crime in drag. Which honestly sounds funny and kind of badass.

Danny uses the lie of "a villain did it" - could he not tell his father to tell that to the school? So his dad could continue to pretend his son has a bad case of AGP?

I think the idea is that Roger is such a Mean Old Sexist he can't stand the idea of people knowing he has a "daughter." Like he's the YA Henry VIII or something.

Since he's been exposed to superhero authorities now, wouldn't one of them contact his father and let him know "hey, we might know a super-scientist that can resolve this, do you want to book an appointment"? He's still legally a child.

See, this is why making superheroes government assets by default not only sucks the fun out of it, but also makes less sense than if the Legion Pacifica were an independent outfit. It wouldn't just be the Legion pestering Danny, he and the Tozers would be under siege by the full force of the United States government, because he's basically gotten their favourite toy lodged inside him.


Let's play along for a moment and pretend that Danny is a totes valid transbian and becoming a real girl is the greatest thing to ever happen to him. How the fuck is his father supposed to know this without being told? Why is he being presented as the one in the wrong? What's the acceptable reaction to having your teenage son get transmogrified into the opposite sex by a magic orb? "Oh well, guess it can't be helped"? Why is Danny so hesitant to "come out" to him anyway, when he already passes flawlessly as a girl?

I'm sure Daniels would say Danny "feared for his safety" or something. Even after he becomes impervious to physical harm.

All this would make slightly more sense if Danny's father was shown actually being abusive at any point, but he isn't. His only crime thus far is not somehow detecting his son's trannyism via psychic link, and yet the author writes out a massive rant about how horrible he is as if that didn't totally come out of nowhere. Really, it's a perfect demonstration of how trans people are encouraged to cut people out of their lives over the mildest perceived slight.

I'm pretty sure Roger was "supposed" to realise his son was a boy because he liked to draw and was quiet.

Oh god, no, that part's setting up that mom is secretly a lesbian and she's going to run off and marry her "twu love". It's staggering how predictable that kind of thing is.

Haha, you wish, mate.

Reading reviews on Goodreads is really funny

In answer to this question:

What kind of teen (or "young adult") would read this?

Hardly any. This is for Goodreads users and their ilk, first and foremost.

Thanks for the reader mail, now, on with the show:

The next day I decide go back to school again.

I would like to inform everyone that we are officially a quarter of a way through the book, and so far we've had more scenes with Danny farting around home and school than superhero shit.

Mom might try to pull me out, might be really mad this time, but I can’t let that stop me. They have to know I won’t be shut away anymore. I won’t live in shame anymore. Truth is, I’m scared to think what will happen when Dad inevitably finds out. Yesterday I felt invincible, but Mom’s quiet little freakout has me rattled. It’ll be bad, I know it will. But I’m stronger now. I’ll be okay. Sooner or later, he’s going to have to accept the fact that I’m not his son. I’m his daughter. He’ll yell and scream and pitch a fit that might last for days or weeks. I don’t look forward to it. But I have to believe this can work. And really, how bad could it get? He hasn’t hit me since he stopped spanking me as a little kid, and if he tries now, he’ll probably break his hand. I can endure whatever comes of this, I know I can.

Okay, I guess we have some concrete answers on the subject of physical abuse in the Tozer household. Also, there's something... quite gross about Danny realising that his mother is also a victim of his dad, and then leaving her to take the brunt of his rage for something he did. Yeah, it doesn't seem like Daniels is trying to imply Roger is an actual wife-beater, but he's clearly meant to be an abusive husband, even if Daniels couldn't be bothered writing those parts.

First, though, I have to get out of the house. Dad always has to leave early to beat rush hour on his way to the crappy retail tax preparation job he’s had since the economy wiped us out, but Mom’s vigilant even in his absence.

One thing you'll notice as we go on is that the story never misses a chance to give Roger shit for being a "failed man." In this case, he's not able to provide for his family as well he wants because he apparently lost his previous job due to economic factors beyond his control. Naturally, Danny's not going to reflect on his this might wear at a man's soul like sandpaper. Given this book was probably written over 2016, I honestly think Daniels just threw it as a sneer at the "financially insecure" people Twitter likes to spit on for voting for the wrong dude.

I make a show of eating breakfast through the times when the school bus should arrive, and when Mom lets her guard down I slip out my window again. Taking a city bus is longer, but in some ways more comfortable since there aren’t other students around. Flying would be faster, but if the kids at school learned I could fly now, too, that would make the crowds and the staring even worse. It might even get some people thinking about why I suddenly have a “special ability” just a few days after they put Dreadnought in the ground.

That special ability thing is still dumb as fuck. Also, if you don't want people staring at you, why are you going to school? You don't exactly strike me as a motivate learner, Dan.

I get to school in time to be late for second period. Class ends, and as we file into the hall there are a lot of eyes staring, but I keep my face blank and pretend I don’t notice. Over the squeak of linoleum and the cascading voices of dozens of conversations, I hear my name more than once. Every time I get nervous, I remind myself I can look down on these people like ants any time I want to. Literally, I can look down on them. Because I can fly, and they can’t. That’s the important thing to remember. I’m invincible.

Always comforting when the Superman expy starts talking like Homelander.

At the end of second period, we have a 15-minute break, and I head for the bathrooms. My hand is actually on the door to the boys’ room before I realize my mistake, and with a giddy kind of smile turn around and head for the girls’ room.

Moments like these are the only times I sense any passion behind this book, and that just tells you so much.

The air seems to snap tight when the door shuts behind me. There are nine or ten other girls in here, and they all seem to look up at me at once, some breaking off in mid conversation. My cheeks get warm, which happens way too often these days. I flick my eyes to the ground and go to stand at the back of the line to get a stall. (There are no urinals in here, so it almost doesn’t seem like a bathroom to me.)

...Is there a urinal in your bathroom, Danny? Oh, maybe Roger hates people being "girly" so hard, he had them installed in their house.

To my great relief, most of the other girls almost immediately lose interest in me.

Oh, fuck off with that nonsense, Daniels. I bet there's a draft of this scene where the other girls were lezzing out and invited Danny to join in.

When I’m done, the bathroom is almost empty, just a few other girls still waiting to use the toilets. I’m washing my hands, trying to be quick but thorough, when I sense someone at the sink next to me staring.


“Yes?” I say, looking over.


It’s a girl I sorta recognize. Long dark hair, dark eyes. She’s looking at me intently. She probably doesn’t like me.

Smart girl.

“Welcome to being a girl. Don’t mind the boys. You’ll get used to them.”

What the hell does she mean by that?

Sadly not. Also, this whole book, Danny has framed himself as a girl like any other, who, at some point in middle-to-late childhood, people just up and decided was actually a boy, and somehow, he's not aware that girls get attention from boys? Despite being attracted to women? It's a shame Graywytch can't read minds, because she should've led with this instead of the tampon stuff.

I think a memo must have gone around because my teachers stop demanding I prove who I am in every class. Whether Mom likes it or not, her coming to the office yesterday, asking for me by name, and then obviously recognizing me and accepting who I am in front of the school secretary has made it more or less official in the school’s eyes. That’s what I hope, anyhow. Fourth period goes by, and I let myself begin to believe the novelty of my transformation is starting to wear off, because most of the other students I’ve already had a class with today don’t stare at me anymore.

Okay, but wouldn't the Tozers have told them they're keeping Danny home because of a superpower-caused injury? There has to be a protocol for that, right?

We join the herd moving toward the cafeteria and split up to the different meal kiosks. There’s a lot of cruddy things about this school, but their food program is really nice. We’ve got plenty of selection, and because there are about a half dozen choices each day, we get to avoid the sort of huge lunch line that eats up half the break period that a lot of kids have to suffer through. I get a slice of pizza and am reaching for a second when I realize this is what a boy would eat. I mean, I’ve seen girls load up their plate like a boy, but now that I’m here I realize there is a big difference in the gender breakdown of different kiosks. The pizza line is almost all boys. Suddenly, I’m worried about getting fat, which is something that hasn’t happened to me before. Nobody cares if a boy is a little chubby, but that’s not true for girls. Crap.

Unless they're 21st century superhero stars, in which case boys are only allowed steroids and steamed chicken.

But can I get fat in this body? It’s my physical ideal, right? Does that mean forever? Crap.

I really hate it when people in books pretend things that are objectively amazing are actually mortifying to try and make it seem less like a wish-fufilment fantasy. Is Danny worried he won't be famine resistant?

I’m about halfway through my slice of pizza when I realize David is staring at my boobs again, and has been for our entire meal, and with that realization I enter a whole new realm of mortification. Don’t get me wrong, I was in the bathroom looking at these things for like an hour when I first got them, but holy crap is it different when it’s him doing it. And not just glancing, but staring with, like, intention.

“David!” I hiss. “My face is up here!”

He looks almost like I’ve startled him out of a reverie. Oh God. He was imagining me naked, wasn’t he?

This might be the most hypocritical thing I've ever read. Again, trans-"lesbian."

“Uh, sorry,” he says, and his face is quickly turning scarlet. “I didn’t, you know, it’s not like I’m gay or anything.”

What?”

“Oh, I mean—”

“First of all, I’m a girl.”

Why the fuck would David say that? Unlike every other trans woman who ever lived, Danny actually passes! It's not like he knows about her cozy internal testes.

Okay, Jesus, sorry.” He munches on a french fry sullenly. “You on your period or something?”


I slap my hand flat on the table, a bit harder than is strictly within the bounds of normal human behavior. It makes an impressive bang, and both our trays jump. “Not. Funny.”

I'm surprised his head didn't come off.

David is meant to be Danny's best friend since childhood. I refuse to believe in all the years they've gone through puberty together, he's never made comments like this in earshot before.

We’re getting looks from the nearest tables. He sees this, and hunches over, embarrassed. “Christ, I said I was sorry! You don’t have to be such a drama queen about it.”


For just the briefest moment, I imagine what the look on his face would be if I introduced him to the stratosphere. Believe it or not, that helps. Maybe it’s not healthy, but it helps. Compared to him, I’m a god. Goddess. Whatever. The point is, I shouldn’t let this little boy get to me.

Yeah, these two totally come off as good friends.

I snort. “And you wonder why you’re single.”


“Oh, oh, I see! I can’t make a joke, but you can be hypersensitive about everything, and make fun of me for not having a girlfriend.”


“You were being a jerk.”


“And you’re being a stuck-up bitch. I’ll see you when you’re over yourself.” He gets up in a huff.

Here's a trick for writing characters who're meant to have a long established relationship, try to imagine a conversation between them prior to the story, then see if the conversation in the story makes sense with that in mind. Seriously, even if David is the biggest sexist idiot in the universe, surely he'd still be processing the fucking shock of this?

As I watch him leave, I take deep breaths and clench my fists. The hell is his problem, anyhow? We never had fights like this before.

That's because David only exists to be cast aside, Dan.

I go to take another bite of salad, and find that I’ve broken my plastic fork. Wonderful.

Truly, she is a god.

As my anger cools, I realize I’ve been feeling things a lot more recently. My highs are higher. My lows are lower. Before, it seemed like half the time I didn’t have feelings as much as I had a script of how I thought I was supposed to feel, and I just followed the script. Maybe for people who are actually male that’s not what it feels like, but for me, testosterone muffled everything.

...This whole arc is just trying to cover up the incel-to-troon pipeline, isn't it?

Now it’s like the estrogen in my blood has taken the cotton out of my head, and I’m feeling things clearly for the first time. Maybe it’s not fair to say my feelings are stronger now, but they have more resolution. Before I was living in muddy pastels, and now things are all lit up in neon. I like it. Even when it hurts, I like it a lot.

I mean, yes, introducing foreign chemicals into your body often affects your mood in pleasant ways.

Next time, Roger actually says something shitty! Also, a plane falls out of the sky, because April Daniels figured he needed to have Danny actually do superhero shit and Superman Returns was on in the other room or something.
 
I like me some good, thoughtful, narrative superhero media. This is not that, but I am appreciating your read-through just the same.

There is a kind of honesty in these kinds of stories, where the author is so convinced of their own self-righteousness and positive character identification they don't feel the need to be elaborately dishonest in setting up their chosen plot twists. And so, Daniels is writing a fairly OK supervillain origin, where the character's relentless self-focus and narcissism shines clearly through despite the first-person narration.

Thanks again for doing the work and putting this together.
 
Thanks again for doing the work and putting this together.

I'm sincerely flattered. As thanks for your lovely compliment, have another chapter of this dogshit book!

David doesn’t get over it, at least not today. He’s sullen and won’t talk to me in the halls, and in class he never once looks my way. We used to get warnings all the time for our whispered conversations, but now it’s like a brick wall between us. Dude, get over it already so I can tell you about my superpowers. Can’t we just go back to hanging out?

Don't pretend you care about the superpowers, Daniels.

I’m relieved when the final bell rings and we head our separate ways to catch the bus home. I’ve got a whole lot of homework to catch up on. Even getting my assignments sent home hasn’t kept me up with my classes. It sucks because I’d totally planned to have superpower practice tonight, but it looks like I might not have time.

Case in point, his self-insert--a teenager who's just received Superman powers--is considering skipping fucking flying practice to do his homework. Danny, my man, I think you've got enough marketable skills. You don't need to worry about getting into a bachelor's program.

When I arrive home, Mom is waiting for me with her lips pressed thin.

“Danny, we talked about this.”

“No, you talked at me,” I say as I pull my books out and get ready to start on French. “But I decided I didn’t agree.”

“Danny!” Her voice is sharp, and I look up in surprise. Mom is not the one who yells. “We are holding on by a thread here, do you know that?”

“Everything would be fine if you’d just let it be!”

“You know that’s not true!” She glances at the front of the house, like she’s scared he’s going to come home early.

You know, a common regret from children of abusive fathers is not being able to protect their mothers. I feel like that won't be in Danny's memoirs.

“Your father is at his wit’s end trying to help you.”


“He’s in denial. I’m a girl. That’s not going to change.”


“You don’t know that. We might find—”


“It won’t change because I don’t want it to.” Mom steps back a little. “I thought you understood that.”


“Why would you think that?”

You speak for us all, Mrs Tozer.

Because you bought me those things. Because…” My throat clenches up and my eyes prickle with tears. Because we had such a nice day out together. Because I felt closer to you that weekend than I ever have before. Because I thought you loved me, and could see I was happy now.

Is that what happened? I mostly remember you squeeing about bras and letting slip that you'd never been inside a shoe store. Or looked at anyone's feet.

“Maybe that was a mistake,” she says quietly. “I shouldn’t have encouraged you.”

I close my French book, and gather my things to take them upstairs. I can’t be out here, and I’m not sure I can study right now. Life on estrogen: the highs are higher, and the lows…well, the lows really suck.

I love it when these dudes mistake depression and chronic boredom for... being a man.

“I’m going to have to tell him when he gets home,” she says to me as I climb the stairs.

“Go right ahead.” He can’t hurt me. He’d hurt himself trying. “I have homework I need to do.”

I still can't believe he means that.

A few hours later, Mount Screamer erupts. Dad practically pounds my door out of the frame before I open it, and then it’s an hour and a half of some of the worst I’ve ever had from him. At first, I think I’m going to stand up to him, that my new strength and resolve will let me laugh off his bellowing, scorn his fury, and deliver an unending stream of witty, insightful arguments that will force him to see where he might be wrong. That’s not even close to how it goes. After a few wavering counter-arguments, my resolve collapses. He drags me back down to the living room because that’s where he likes to do this kind of thing. He’s screaming so loud, so close, I have to fight the urge to wipe my face. He pins me to the couch with the sheer volume of his rage.

There's something vaguely perverse about making a character with Superman powers and having them be browbeat like this.

Once, at one of those hearing tests they give us every few years, they found out my left ear was worse than my right. I told them I didn’t know why that would be, but the truth was I knew immediately. It’s because when he’s like this, I always look away to the right and he screams at the left side of my face.

At this point, why not just make Roger physically abusive? It'd hardly be any more overwrought.

Now, with my improved hearing, heightened to the upper limit of human senses, he is louder and more painful than he has been in years.

Somehow I doubt any of the last three Dreadnoughts ever curled up into a ball because too loud uwu.

He tells me I’m stupid.

True.

That I’m not thinking big picture.

God, yes.

That nobody will respect me while I look like a freak.

...He looks like a chick. Like, an actual chick. This is the kind of comment that only makes sense if Danny was an actual "trans woman." Or is Roger a Honkey-Faggot from Outer-Space and thus never seen a teenage girl? Alternatively, maybe Danny's transition is actually a psychic illusion and Roger can see he actually looks like Kevryn under it.

He says I’ve damaged my reputation, that nobody will take me seriously now.

Is there a stigma against superpower injuries in this universe?

He demands to know why I don’t have the good sense to be ashamed of what happened to me, but doesn’t wait for an answer before saying I’ve embarrassed them all. He says I’m pathetic, that I’m delusional, that I’m sick.

Okay, I need to know, has Danny actually come out as trans to his dad yet? Did his mother tell him? Because if so, that really feels like a moment that ought to be depicted directly, or at least confirmed explicitly. If not, why is he suddenly talking like he's always known Danny's trans and he just came home in programmer socks?

He tells me I’m disloyal, that I’m a bad son, that I’m selfish and disgusting. He tells me I’m weak, and gross, and that I have no moral fiber. He says he’s never been so ashamed of me, and then he goes on to emphasize how low that is, given all the other times I’ve shamed him. He says all of this at a volume to shake the rafters. When I start to cry he calls me a sniveling pussy and says he’s glad his father is dead so he never had to see what a failure I am. I suck it up fast, force the tears back as quick as I can, because I know the longer I cry the worse it will get.


Mom doesn’t even watch, but that’s no surprise. I stopped expecting her to help me years ago.

Maybe it would've been good to have seen some of this stuff at the start of the book, instead of just having Roger be gruff but trying his best while Danny assures us over and over he's the worst. If April Daniels wrote a murder-mystery, the killer would spend the whole book being nice to everyone while having a rock-solid alibi, but everyone would somehow already know he was the murderer, and then he'd pull out his breast-ripper knife and everyone would go "Told ya so."

Mom doesn’t even watch, but that’s no surprise. I stopped expecting her to help me years ago.

Yeah, I'm sure her life with this guy is pure bliss, Danny. I swear to God, this kid is the anti-Percy Jackson.

The worst part is I can’t help but believe him. He always has a way of making me believe him. I really am disgusting and pathetic.

This falls so flat. Yeah, abusive parents can fuck with a kid's head something fierce, but that's because most kids look up to their parents, or at least trust them to show them how the world works and how they relate to it. Danny meanwhile has shown nothing but contempt for her father and his opinions. When Roger showed him affection, Danny immediately wrote it off as some kind of evil man trick, without any kind of doubt or desperate hope that it might be genuine. At no point has Danny even considered the possibility that, in his own way, Roger might be trying to help him out. It rings false that Danny would even give enough of a shit about what his dad thinks that it could get under his skin like this.

What Daniels is trying to do feels a lot like Hank and his dad Cotton on King of the Hill. The difference there was that while Hank intellectually knew Cotton was full of shit, he still loved his dad. That was the tragedy of it all! It also helped that Cotton had enough scattered moments of humanity that he felt like a person.

I can crack the sound barrier, but I can’t stand up to this man. If I were worthy of my powers, I wouldn’t even flinch. But I’m not. I don’t deserve them. I don’t deserve anything. I’m crumpling like a cardboard box in the rain. The promise I made myself feels like a sick joke. There’s no way I can just decide not to let anyone push me around. God, I was so stupid. I’m always stupid. I always mess it up. I’m a worthless, stupid, disgusting little freak.

Watch as Danny turns back into a perfectly poised spokes-ma'am for Current Year Edition trans thought next time someone challenges him on it.

I start crying again because I realize I still hate myself.

I feel this is quite reflective of the current cultural moment, even beyond just the trans shit. This idea that we are forever bound and defined by our "traumas" even if we somehow literally became gods.

Danny goes off to cry in the sky.

I’m empty and floating. The cloud has moved on, but I’ve stayed where I am, curled up in the air, looking across the Sound toward the city. Geese honk as they fly past a little ways off from me. It should be safe enough to stay here a while. Normally, after something like this happens, I go to my room, go to sleep quickly, and my parents let me. They won’t expect to see or hear from me at home for hours, and I seriously consider never going back. In the vacant calm that comes right after a hard crash, I realize I could just…fly. Fly away and never come back. The cold doesn’t bother me—hell, being in orbit doesn’t bother me—so I don’t even need a place to sleep if I can find a comfortable spot in the woods. For food, I could figure something out. Maybe I could get an aerial courier job and get paid under the table.

You can tell when an author has no imagination because neither do their characters. Godlike superpowers, and the best Danny can think of is to go work for UberEats or something.

Anyway, Danny saves a plane. Fun fact, whenever a plane flys over a novice superhero (or sometimes even a superhero who's been on holidays for a while) probability warps, causing a 200% increase in mechanical failure or pilot error. This is why Pan-Am assassinated most superheroes back in the 1970s. It actually occupies the better part of two chapters, but it's not a terribly interesting sequence. Basically, Danny saves the day, and it becomes clear his super-strength is more a kind of telekinesis mediated through touch, just like every other Superman analogue invented in the last forty years or so, because superhero writers these days are shockingly bearish about characters doing things that are impossible. Forgive me if I skip to the end:

I gently peel the kid off of me and smile at him. He’s got a grin as wide as the world on his face, looks almost as happy as I feel. Everything is wonderful, and for once I am happy to be me.


“Uh, gimme some room, I gotta take off.”


“Don’t go!” someone shouts.


“I have homework,” I say, and it shouldn’t be funny, but people laugh. Gently, slowly, I push myself into the air. There’s another burst of applause, and I turn and wave to them as I gain altitude, then pivot away and head for the night. I don’t feel so tired anymore. Everything is loose and airy. Bizarrely, I think about how maybe this was a little too close to caping for me to do in throwaway colors, and I consider putting some serious sonic boom distance between me and the scene. But…

Yeah, I'm sure the roving supervillains were going to leave you alone before you saved a fucking plane.

Next time, more David, because fuck you, teenage boys everywhere!
 
Is it just me, or is skipping over what the dad said in favor of summarizing it kinda cheap? We've been building up to this since the transformation occurred, and we don't even get to see the full brunt of the conversation. Odd.

I shouldn't be, but I was thinking about how to make this kind of story work. I think it could still serve as a trans metaphor if it was waaaaay more understated. Like, no mention of trans or hormones or estrogen. Essentially turn it into a genderbender story - boy gets turned into a girl, decides he's fine with it, has to deal with the trials and tribulations of everyone adjusting to the change. Some people accept him right away. Danny's dad digs his heels in because this is a big thing to accept. Danny coming to slowly realize his friend (and likely by extension, him) have been kind of shitty to women now that shes on the other side of the fence. Also make it where it's not literally the biggest, most importantest hero in the world that caused the transition. The superhero part is clearly on the backburner compared to the Danny's interpersonal relationships, so maybe make it a less powerful hero and Danny can work his way up the ranks when his life shit gets sorted out. I don't know. I think a big issue with social justice writing is that it's way too literal.

There's no point in speculating how to fix it, though, it's not trying to tell a story. It's a weird wish fulfilment fantasy and the author can't seem to take readers who may have different perspectives into account to convince them of Danny's struggles.
 
The superhero part is clearly on the backburner compared to the Danny's interpersonal relationships, so maybe make it a less powerful hero and Danny can work his way up the ranks when his life shit gets sorted out. I don't know. I think a big issue with social justice writing is that it's way too literal.

Personally, I think Daniels would've been served well by jettisoning the whole legacy hero thing altogether. All it adds is baggage to the premise that he doesn't seem interested in exploring. Similarly, while he gestures at this being a full on kitchen sink style superhero world with loads of different flavours of high-strangeness, he's either too lazy or too embarrassed to fill in any of the details, so why not ditch that too? Just have it be like The Incredibles or X-Men: some people are born with powers that manifest at different points in life. Part of this involves the body molding to the person's personal ideal self, which in Danny's case involves becoming female. In this model, the sterility might seem less arbitrary than if it was the work of some cosmic principle. You still have the themes of self-discovery and Danny figuring out what to do with his life, but without the drag of having him be the Most Important Kid in the World. Admittedly, since I can't imagine Danny would be the first trans-identifying super in the world, you'd probably have to cut his parents not realising he's trans and and has powers. Which is good, because that's a stupid fucking plot point that drags the book's momentum through the mud.

Though, perhaps both of our advice is wrongheaded: we're trying to imagine a decent superhero story with trans themes. I'm not sure Daniels didn't just mix in the superhero stuff so the book would have a market outside the dodgy Discord crowd. Aside from the token TERF being Dr. Strange, Danny's powers haven't mattered at all so far. They haven't even let him stand up to his manlet dad.

Oh, might be a few days or so before the next update, I want to get on top of my own writing.

EDIT: Fuck, I use "just" way too much. Also, I just realised my "pitch" for "Less-Shit-Dreadnought" is basically the Whatley Academy. A curse be upon my my house.
 
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Yeah, for me at least, the Dad dressing-down didn't impact at all. It didn't even feel fake, it felt...perfunctory. But it's also so out of left field from how we've seen the dad behave at this point, it feels like an entirely informed scene; it has to happen that way because that was the beat the author decided, but with none of the set-up to make it work with the characters established.

I think I agree that just having him describe it, when we've seen the extent that Danny is an unreliable narrator already, just makes it a lot of nothing to me. Which is a shame; I feel like this is setting up the primary conflict of this book so far. Hell, if the author didn't want to dwell on it, he could have written the little bit that Danny was able to participate in, then just have him admit that he retreated into himself and literally didn't hear the rest of it once he started crying.

Also, if this was a predicted response...why did Danny go home in the first place? Why not just try to make a new life for himself, and go ultimate-stealth? It would suck for his friends and parents to have their son vanish, but this is a world with full-contact supervillain fights; it has to be known and accepted that sometimes the heroes don't catch the bus in time and a bunch of people just don't go home. For a fight that killed the world's premier hero, with him in the vicinity, no one would ask any questions.

But, as far as I can tell, the primary point of the book is Danny being able to 'It's ma'am!' at full super-powered volume at everyone in his life, and everything else seems in service to that, so I can see why the author made their decision, even the character decisions don't make sense.
 
Fuck it, I got a lot done, this chapter is short and stupid, I need to feed the brainworms:

The first thing I notice when I wake up is pain, but I feel good. My side is complaining loudly, and when I feel around, I notice my whole flank is a little swollen and there’s a spot near the bottom of my ribs that really does not like being pushed on. Purple bruises mottle the skin all up and down my side. I don’t really understand how I did what I did last night. I wish the other Dreadnoughts were here. There’s so much I need to ask them. That thing with the lattice worked, but I hurt myself. Last night made it obvious I don’t understand my limits at all, or how I can get around them. Once I’m healed up, I’m going to need to do a lot of experimenting.

Oh yeah, saving the plane with tactile telekinesis took a lot out of Danny physically. It's kind of annoying for my purposes that Daniels sticks most of the importantish plot points in the most boring parts. Also, yes, Danny, I wish the other Dreadnoughts were here too, or described at all in any detail. Anyway, Danny's in the papers:

UNKNOWN SUPERHERO SAVES PASSENGER JET

Not really related, but this makes me wonder, if Kiwi Farms exists in any of the big shared superhero universe, do we cover like, supervillains and some of the more... bovine superheroes?

I want to cheer, but I can’t let anyone hear me.

Why not?

I guess I could go talk to the Legion but—but hey, screw the Legion! I’m still pissed off at them for what happened last time I showed up there.

Doc, Chlorophyll, Valkyrja, and Magma all welcomed you with open arms, and Carapace was clearly more spectrum and probably grief-stricken than hateful towards you. They all sided with you against Graywytch. What more do you want?

Again, it's hard to have conflict about living under a bigot's roof or figuring out your way as a superhero when there's at least four people who'd gladly make you their Robin.

My mood is so good, even Dad sneering at me on the way out the door when he sees me with my backpack at the breakfast table doesn’t bring me down. Mentally, I kick myself for forgetting to leave the bag upstairs until I’m ready to go.

But all he says is, “You don’t have the sense God gave a tapeworm, letting people see you this way. It’s disgusting, parading around like that when they all know you’re really a boy.”

I play it smart though, and just stare into my cereal.

No, playing it smart would involve lifting the fucking table over your head one-handed and telling your dad to shove of. Later, at school, because God forbid this superhero book be about cool shit:

“You know, it really upsets me how girls are always so quick to jump up and down on me.”


I stop chewing for a moment, and a little choir of dread starts singing in the back of my mind. “Like how so?” I hear myself ask.


“Like, they’re always sneering at me. It’s not fair.”


“Yeah, uh, that…that sucks man.” David strikes out a lot, so this isn’t the first time he’s talked about this, but it seems like I’m hearing him more clearly than I used to. I take a long sip from my cup of diet soda to cover this new disquiet. My memories of him batting off the advances from a girl named Shelly last year are still pretty vivid. She’s about as chubby as he is, so he wasn’t interested. But I don’t want another fight, so I don’t mention it.

Who wants to bet whether Danny's love interest (because of course there's one of those) is a weird skinny dude with greasy long hair and striped knee-socks, a human fridge with a septum ring whose "feminine presentation" amounts to a pink singlet and sometimes remembering to shave, or a smoking hot, bisexual superheroine?

Also, again with this weird trans Nuremberg defense. "I was just following the script for boys when I ignored my best mate being a sexist prick! But my inner experience was still exactly the same as any other little girl!"

“Oh good, I’m glad you still understand!” he says with visible relief. Still understand, he says. This conversation feels like I’m missing some really important context. “So, I was thinking. I’ve been your friend for, like, ever. You know I’m a nice guy, but I never get a fair chance. Well, this is my chance.”


“Your chance?” Oh no.

This is the most 2017 book ever written. Is David going to start talking about lobsters and cleaning his room?

“I mean, uh, you and me.” Oh no no no. “We could, you know, date now.” Oh no. Oh no. Oh no.

No.

After an empty moment I say, “You know I’m gay, right?”
News to me, Dan.
“So that works then!”


“Um, no?”

Accidentally Based David.

But he doesn’t even hear me, just talks right through me. “I’ve been lonely a long time. I guess I’m ready to settle.” He says this like he’s making an intimate, painful, and somehow brave confession. There’s a seriousness in his face that is begging me to be impressed.

A reminder to all you good readers that this is literally the second time David has met with Danny since he randomly transformed into a girl, and he's already formulated and decided to prosecute a cartoon-incel plan to make him his boy-bride like a somehow less demented Nero and Sporus. And he does this while dropping Then-Current-Year buzzwords like "nice guy."

Does that sound... likely to any of you? Organic? It's yet another symptom of one of Dreadnought's biggest problems: all the characters are creatures of pure function. Doc Impossible exists purely to affirm Danny and explain how nobody could ever tell Danny wasn't born a girl. Graywytch is there to be the token TERF, because for some reason troons seem to fear and hate them more than the people who actually (very occasionally) beat them up in real life. Danny's parents are just a framework for misery porn. Even Danny himself doesn't have much of a personality beyond "feels euphoria when bra, is sad people say not girl." David's purpose meanwhile is to be the mandatory example of "toxic masculinity." Daniels clearly made no effort to imagine how these characters would've interacted outside the events of the story, and how this might impact the story itself.

“Ready to settle?” Oh how big of him. He’s willing to settle. For the most beautiful girl in school who, OH YEAH, HAS FREAKING SUPERPOWERS.

I'd actually expect a trans-identifying-male's "ideal female body" to fall squarely into the uncanny valley. And have severe issues with its centre of gravity. Also, I'm pretty much certain at this point that Daniels decided to have Danny keep quiet about his superpowers because he realised that everyone in universe and out would be much more interested in that than him growing a pair of anime-girl tits.

“Well, what I mean is it’s not ideal, I guess,” says David quickly, perhaps dimly sensing danger. Oh, this should be good. “Like, it might be awkward at first, but we could make this work. I mean, you look good enough that I don’t even really care that you’re kind of a dude inside.”

Why the fuck would David say that? Remember when he got caught checking out Danny's rack? He immediately assured Danny he wasn't gay. It's clearly not a label he wants to be associated with. So why would he be implying Danny's a boy in any way? Surely he'd be giving Vaush esque speeches about how trans women are in fact biological female too, and it's totally straight to be attracted to lady-dick and dolphin testicles. I think Daniels wants David to be a stand-in for chasers, but chasers are into trans-women specifically because they're male, whereas David wants to get with Danny because he passes impossibly well. It just doesn't work.

Side-note, the idea that your average teenage boy in a 2010s American high-school wouldn't be chomping at the bit to claim some kind of "queer" status is very "I still think it's 2005."

I set down my fork. “I am not, and I never have been, a ‘dude inside.’

Nah, you were just genetically, anatomically, and romantically identical to every heterosexual boy on the planet.

“I don’t like boys, any boys.

"Why, I even played FemShep in Mass Effect!"


“This is unbelievable,” he mutters, and I don’t know why, but that sets me off more than anything else he’s said so far.

“Get up and walk away right now,” I snarl. “Stay away, and maybe I won’t tell everybody about that birth mark you showed me when we were eight.”

“Woah!” His eyes are wide with shock. He leans in and whispers, his voice tight with fury, “That’s not cool!”

If this was a proper comic-book world that birthmark would be an authorisation mark for an ancient alien suit of power-armour.

“Try me. See what happens.”

David gets up and leaves, but as he goes, he says things to me that make me understand we will never be friends again.

Funny story. As I mentioned, I first experienced Dreadnought as an audiobook. I must've been distracted when this part happened, because when Danny goes on to tell us what David said later on, I assumed I'd missed something. Actually, taken together with what some of you fine Kiwis have pointed out, it's interesting Daniels chose to summarise both this scene and Roger's verbal abuse. From what I remember, it's a trend that will continue. Given this is obviously aimed at a very SJW crowd, I wonder if Daniels is worried about "triggering" readers by directly depicting negative shit like that. If so, I'm reminded a bit of Remake, which is an evangelical Christian snuff-thriller. If you're wondering what that looks like, put it like this, if your religion forbids you from showing a thing on screen, you probably shouldn't make a movie about it. Same goes for TRA gospel.

However, given Daniels appears perfectly willing to actually write out Graywytch's dialogue, I think there's another, more plausible explanation: he's a stupid, lazy hack. You know how the various "crowning moment" pages on tv-tropes are some of the cringiest shit on there? Especially the stuff involving badass speeches and the like? The thing is, a lot of those bits are legimitately excellent writing, they just lack the power they should because they're divorced from their proper context. All the work the author put in establishing atmosphere and tension is stripped out. Daniels clearly doesn't have the talent to say, put us in the shoes of an abused child being yelled at by their father, so instead he just has Danny say it was horrible and traumatising after the fact.

Not because I wouldn’t forgive him; because he will always be too proud to let himself be forgiven.

This sentence is technically gender-affirming surgery, because I'm pretty sure Daniels ripped his cock off writing it. Also, Danny, David just said he was willing to go prison-gay, I don't think he's too proud for anything.

The next couple of chapters are short and pretty low on content, so let's cover them here:

My final period is study hall, but I sign out from the classroom to take it in the library instead and then leave school early. It will probably get caught and counted as an absence, and there’s a real chance I’ll catch Saturday school for this, but I don’t have much of a choice.

I mean, you do. Literally no force on Earth except other superhumans could hope to restrain you, and trust me, the Transhuman Earth Guardians are way too busy to play truant officer.

My super suit is banged up from last night, mostly in the boots, which were almost scraped apart against the airport tarmac, and I need to see about getting some repairs. The heels are barely hanging on, and the soles have been rubbed away until they look like sediment layers in rock formations. New ones might be pretty expensive, so my first crack at replacing them is going to see if I can get more from the Legion.

Ah, so it was Danny who organised the Hogwarts Legacy boycott.

The problem is that I’m grounded more or less forever now, so if I’m going to be somewhere that’s not school or home I have to do it in a way that my parents won’t hear about it. Flying makes that easier, but I still want to finish this up before they expect me home.

Again, what are they going to do if you're late home? Can Roger sap your powers by reciting YWNBAW at you?

I get lucky with a city bus and manage to get home in just a few minutes. After taking a quick look around to make sure nobody is nearby, I risk a super speed dash down the alley and fly up to my bedroom window. Just a minute or two later, I’ve got the suit on and am leaving, going straight up just under the speed of sound.

Wouldn't it save more time to just go to the tower directly? They know Danny's real name, I'm sure they'd buzz him up.

Legion Tower has spotlights walking back and forth across the sky from its apex twenty-four hours a day, every day. From above, I realize that’s so flying heroes can find it even when the clouds are thick over the city.

Nah, it's so they can blind airplane pilots for practice.

The thick glass doors open as I approach, and an elevator is waiting for me. As I step inside, an intercom clicks on. It’s Doc Impossible.


“Hi Danny. We’re on the common level, that’s 37. Come on down.”


“Um, when you say ‘we’, who are you referring to?” No freaking way I’m going to talk to Graywytch today. Or hopefully ever again. In fact, maybe I can get replacement boots somewhere else.

That might be less pathetic if this wasn't how people like Danny treated women who weren't all-powerful sorceresses.

“You want some cocoa? Mugs are over there.” Doc Impossible gestures to some cabinets along the kitchen wall. I fill one from a hot chocolate and cappuccino dispenser, and then I’m sitting and having hot chocolate with a pair of friggin’ superheroes like it’s something I do all the time.

I feel like that would be an observation worth making in the 1950s or something before Marvel introduced the world to superheroes bickering about the phone bill. Doc and Valkyrja compliment Danny on saving the plane, with the latter suggesting that maybe next time he does something like that, it could be with proper superhero colours. Doc is pissed.

Doc Impossible sets down her mug. “She is fifteen, Val.”


“As was I, when first I picked up a sword.”


“This is the 21st century,” snaps Doc. “We don’t do that to children anymore.”

"This is a comment that totally makes sense with me knowing how you actually work, Val!"

Danny explains his telekinesis trick with the plane:

“Uh, I guess, it’s like I could see the momentum and I sorta… tugged it in another direction?” I say. “Does that make sense?”


Doc Impossible and Valkyrja trade a look of confusion. “I confess it does not,” says Valkyrja.


“Okay, uh, how to put this. I guess I can sorta see what’s…well, not ‘see’ exactly, but I have this sense of a lattice that seems behind and under reality. Did Dreadnought ever talk about his powers or say anything like this?”


“Not that I recall,” says Doc Impossible. “He kept his powers pretty close to the vest to prevent his enemies from learning his limits.”

I hope we're meant to assume the first three Dreadnoughts were just canny and not that Danny somehow discovered a novel use of their powers the first time he used them for something other than crying in orbit. Doc wants to examine Danny's injuries:
The elevator ride is long, and starting to get a little strained.

Doc Impossible takes a drag on her cigarette. “She likes men.”

Can one of my superpowers please be melting through the floor, disappearing forever, and having everyone who ever met me forget that I exist? Please? But I’m supposed to be an invincible badass now, so all I say is, “That’s disappointing.”

I'm sure Danny could figure out a way to make straight chicks not wanting to sleep with him transphobic if you gave him a mo.

“Oh.” Somehow, I would have expected that to be a lot more painful.


“They’ve set themselves—which is amazing, by the way; most people’s bodies don’t do that—and on anyone else I’d say they’d be about one week into healing, but even that is a little slower than how Dreadnought normally healed.”

Are we meant to assume Danny's regenerative powers are slower because they're preoccupied making him seem female? Because that's hilarious. Danny's suit and boots can actually regenerate themselves over time, but Danny decides to get a new set, because you know, consoom. Doc also offers to make Danny some civilian clothes, which leads to... this:

A few minutes later, I’m sitting curled in the corner with my new clothes bunched in my lap. Those old instincts to hide and clutch things furtively are still with me, it seems. That’s what safety feels like. I rest my head against the wall and enjoy the feel of my new stockings against the skin of my legs. I feel relaxed and happy and free. So wonderfully, gloriously free.

"Constricting clothes, I'm freeeeeee!""

“Do you know how to claim your colors?” she [Valkyrja] asks.


“Uh, I thought I would just ask for a different suit.”


Valkyrja shakes her head. “The one you wear is the one you will fight in. Examine the inside of your left wrist. There you will find the toggle to change your colors.”

That's a fun feature, I will admit.

Now that I know to look for it I notice there is a small blister there, a circle slightly raised from the material around it. I push on it, and it snaps down while another blister pops up next to it. The suit’s gray camoflauge begins to run and fade, and brighter colors push themselves up through the material until my suit is navy blue with a white cape, mantle, and cowl. The first Dreadnought was an officer in the US Army Air Force, and wearing naval-themed colors really pissed his superior officers off. One wonders if he enjoyed tweaking their noses.

Okay, now we know more about the first Dreadnought--a guy who died more than fifty years ago--than the guy who literally died in front of Danny.

“Why didn’t anybody tell me about this?” A little prick of disappointment pokes me. Doc Impossible likes to talk about how she wants me to have all the information, but then she conveniently forgets to mention I could take Dreadnought’s colors any time I want.


“It is in the handbooks we gave you, is it not?”


“Oh, uh.” And now I feel like a jerk. Good job, dumbass. “I’ve had a lot of homework to catch up on.”

A trans person realising they were overreacting to a perceived slight? Someone alert the presses!

“Indeed,” says Valkyrja, and she either doesn’t notice my embarrassment or pretends not to. “If you choose not to carry Dreadnought’s banner, you can command your suit to display heraldry of your own design. There is a small lead on your suit, near the belt line.” I look down and after a few moments searching find it. The cord is kind of springy, and retracts back into the suit automatically when I let it go. “To access your suit’s advanced functions, insert it into the port of USB on your telephone cellular.”


I look up at her, suspicious. My telephone cellular, she says. “You’re just screwing with me now, aren’t you?”


“I don’t know what you refer to.” Valkyrja’s smile is too wide not to be in on the joke. “Would you like my address for mail electronic?”

Okay, this is a little cute. See, Daniels, I'm not that hard to charm.

“Danny, why did you lie to us?” she asks. She doesn’t sound mad, and she doesn’t sound curious. She sounds like she already knows the answer and wants me to confirm it.


My whole body tightens. “What? I didn’t lie—”


“This body was born in 1979, but I am the sum of my mother, and all my mother’s mothers; my years number nine and twelve hundred. I have heard every lie tongues can speak. Scant few can deceive me, and you are not among them. You were not practicing flying. Yet, you were there. Why were you there, and why did you not tell us of it?”

That sounds absolutely horrifying, and much more interesting than Danny thinking he was a girl because he held his books the wrong way. But why the fuck would anyone ever need a reason to go flying if they could?

Her voice is soft and kind. “Danny, do you feel safe at home?”

Are we talking actual "safe" or Twitter "safe"?

No.

There it is. I don’t feel safe at home. I open my mouth to say something, and as I do I realize that like my mother, I can’t give it its name. Not out loud. Not even to Valkyrja. Because if I admit it, if I call it what it is, then I can’t hide from it anymore either. It becomes real in a way I am not ready for. Might never be ready for. There will be no illusions of safety, no peaceful times alone in my room.

Unless your dad can cough up nukes, I think you'll be fine. Seriously, why not make Roger physically abusive? It's easier to write than verbal or emotional abuse, and unlike real life, Roger can't contradict Danny's account.

There will only be times when he’s not hurting me.

Like literally every moment of the rest of your life.

She puts her hand on my shoulder. “I can arrange for you to have quarters here. You need not return there.”

“It’s fine,” I say. “I’m fine.” I’m struggling not to hyperventilate.

“Sometimes it requires great strength and courage to ask for help.”

My throat is tight, and I can’t look at her. “Don’t tell anyone.”

“Danielle—”

There is literally no reason for Danny to turn this down. He has displayed no lingering affection for either of his parents. There's no way the government wouldn't side with the fucking superheroes if they tried taking them to court. Even taking Graywytch into account, trust me, having a virtual stranger slag you off is always preferable to having it be your own flesh and blood. This conflict is completely artificial, and the stakes non-existent.

It’ll be fine. Dad had his blowup, and now he’ll start to get over it. The more time he has to think about it and grow used to the idea, the better it will get. He’ll start to understand this is permanent, and though he may not ever like it, and I probably still will need to leave the house on my eighteenth birthday, I don’t think there is going to be another night like last night again any time soon. As long as I stay out of his way, and don’t do anything really femme around him, things will be okay.

The justifications, the optimistic scenarios, come naturally to me.

Because it’s a skill set.

And I’ve had practice.

I love how none of these "optimistic scenarios" take into account Danny's godlike powers. For all TRAs talk about how resilient and brave they are, they can't help but construct worlds where shouty dudes are stronger than them, even when they can catch falling planes.

Dinner is quiet and strained, the way it normally is for a day or so after a big blowup, but aside from some grumbling and some snide remarks, we get through it fine.

Okay, I want to know who was making the snide remarks. Because if Danny was getting in jabs of his own without it turning into a nuclear conflagration, this sounds less like an abusive household and more... one with a teenager in it.

All the homework I didn’t get to yesterday is still waiting for me, and TV is one of the things I’m not allowed to do anymore (I haven’t been foolish enough to ask how long I am grounded for) so I hit the books straight away and stay with them until the sun goes down.

Is homework one of Daniels' fetishes?

Conjugation in French is a special kind of horror, on par with the sort of things you’d need to do to call up the Old Ones when the stars are right.

Tv-tropes arse line right there.

I’m doing my best to get through this exercise on gerunds when I hear a tap on my window. There’s nobody there when I look, and I almost start to believe I didn’t hear anything after all. The Legion has my phone number, so they’re not going to do the knocking-on-windows thing again, right?

I still want to know why the Legion haven't talked to Danny's parents. Especially if they suspect there's abuse.

Just to be sure, I get up and open the window. The moment it’s open enough to clear a body, Calamity swings down from the roof and into my room in a single liquid motion. She looks around curiously, and then turns back to me. She tips her hat.

“Howdy, Dreadnought.”

April Daniels: Ugh, they want me to write about dumb capeshit stuff again.

Next time, dumb capeshit stuff!
 
Just wanted to say I'm enjoying this thread - thanks for taking one for the team.

You’re too kind.

I wasn't expecting a "Metabarons" ripoff in a low-class joint like this.

Huh, didn’t even occur to me. Though, the place I saw that concept was in Jodorowsky’s Dune treatment. There’s another rip-off later that, while less obscure than that, is still a surprisingly deep cut for such a surface-level take on superheroes. It’s also so utterly unchanged from its inspiration it’s practically plagiarism, but we’ll get to that.
 
Well, at least trooning out gave him something in return for a diminished sex drive ans other fun medical side effects. The semper fi was for the gif, btw.
Pen names are becoming a necessity, I've seen some recent openings where they say applications are for "Women of Color only." Publishing is 100% pozzed and I completely understand if an author self publishes. Don't diminish it by saying they aren't good enough to be published, as publishing is not a meritocracy. Hoping he "trooned" out rather actually trooning out.
 
Pen names are becoming a necessity, I've seen some recent openings where they say applications are for "Women of Color only." Publishing is 100% pozzed and I completely understand if an author self publishes. Don't diminish it by saying they aren't good enough to be published, as publishing is not a meritocracy. Hoping he "trooned" out rather actually trooning out.

As an aspiring novelist trying to find an agent (hah!) I can tell you you’ll develop some very particular prejudices. I was looking at this agency, nearly all the agents were white ladies. All of their bios talked more about the identity characteristics they were seeking than the kinds of books they wanted. Meanwhile, the one black lady on staff was like “I enjoy cozy mysteries!” and didn’t even mention race. I honestly feel a bit sorry for her. Imagine being the One Black Friend to a dozen aging danger-hairs. Must be exhausting.

It’s also kind of a bum wrap for a lot of minority authors as well. I’ve seen a whole bunch of non-white writers bemoan that it’s easy to get a book deal if you’re writing about “generational trauma” and the smells of your abuela’s kitchen, not so much if you’re just writing about spaceships and happen to be brown.
 
Goddamnit. One of my favorite things about superhero media in general, particularly kitchen-sink settings, is that every character can represent an absolutely unique perspective, and have not just experiences and history but their own personal metaphysical power to back it up. Like, I'm just assuming that Greywytch is a magic-user along the line of Sandman's Thessaly, whose own magical tradition can recognize that Danny is, to her magic, not a woman, and let that perspective bounce off of Impossible's down-to-the-chromosome science, and have Valkyrja interject with her own perspective that gender roles are what you do, so since Danny is doing woman he's a woman to her.

And then we could have her be supportive in that case, and then be somewhere between callous and befuddled when her own very-old perspective simply does not recognize Danny's home troubles as troubles, because she has centuries of memories of people getting shouty and it being absolutely fine, and two generations at most of anyone thinking it was a problem.

You have the opportunity, in stories like this, to so richly characterize your world and your characters with your choices, and when the characters aren't slavishly following their designated narrative role in their actions, their actions are being narrated over, because Writing is Hard.

The fact that this book has sequels, plural, fills me with sadness. But hey, I am enjoying the guided tour.
 
Also, why not have super-scientists impact the wider world? I'd read Transmetropolitan with superheroes! It'd be like if the New Justice Team of Futurama was a whole series! I can't see how Dreadnought's basic narrative (Idiot teen gains godlike powers, is mostly concerned with their fancy new vagina) would be precluded by Danny's smartphone operating on quantum entanglement, or the rare earths used to manufacture it being mined from an asteroid. Admittedly, if there are any mad biologists out there, that might throw a wrench into things. But I don't think anyone here would object to the version of Dreadnought where Danny sleeved into a female body for a week, got bored, turned back into a boy, and got into woodwork or something.

There was a webcomic in the early oughts about mad scientists that had something of an explanation for this- Mad science is replicable, but it's also incredibly incredibly dangerous and unreliable without a mad on hand to handle the eccentricities, but that comes with having an equally dangerous and unreliable mad on hand, and Mads tend to destroy themselves and their equipment long before it can fall to the general populace. The sequel reveals that the government is working on making the technology safe and mass producable, but the going is slow and often just as dangerous as the original article.

That's Narbonic and Skin Horse. The first even has a short term plot where the male lead is turned into a woman by his mad scientist boss for laughs and it deals with this shit oodles better than this pile of shit. The second is accidentally anti-trans, as the character a lot of the trans audience glommed onto (Nerdy Jewish guy whose brain was scooped out and put into an osprey by the government and who starts identifying as a helicopter out of convenience) eventually regains a human body and keeps it because he wants to have a sexual relationship with the technically not Mad scientist that put his brain in the first place.


From the snippets of the book I've read in the book, I absolutely concur that Danny comes across as an exceptionally unreliable narrator. Like, I would not be surprised if none of the things he attributes to other people are correct. Danny is incredibly self-centered and blinkered. And yeah, this is absolutely a villain origin story, not a heroic one.

I also don't think there was any consistent worldbuilding done here. Valkyrie has been an active legacy superhero for 900 years now, and that hasn't changed the course of human history? Most comic book universe tend to have even basic handwaves as to why superheroes are a new thing, even if some of the players were around for thousands of years.


Also, I guarantee you that the name Carapace came about because of free association from Iron Man. "Iron Man, Shell Head, Shell, Carapace! Done!"
 
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