If you were a young wordsmith at Queenās in 2018, you may have received the same advice that Catherine Hernandez was trying to tell herself at the time. The award-winning author and screenwriter was that yearās writer-in-residence at Queenās and, as she urged the emerging writers she mentored to be brave, she also needed her own dose of courage.
āWhen youāre a visiting author, you spend most of your calories inspiring budding authors to keep going, to not be afraid, to not let their fears cloud their work,ā she explains. But she, too, was afraid, she admits, and needed similar words of wisdom.
While at Queenās, Ms. Hernandez wrote parts of her second novel, Crosshairs, a dystopian account of an armed resistance against a regime that locks up communities of colour, the disabled, and the LGBTQ2S in Toronto.
āI was worried about backlash, of being dismissed or erased for telling the truth,ā she says.
But she also knew she had to be bold. āIf I didnāt follow my own advice, I know I would have failed my readers.ā
Ms. Hernandez took her own advice again when writing her most recent novel, Behind You. Flipping back and forth in time, it follows two narratives examining the insidiousness of rape culture. In one, a young Filipina named Alma grows into womanhood as a serial rapist and killer attacks women and girls in Scarborough, Ont. In the other, years later, Alma struggles with her own ideas of consent as she watches her sonās dangerous behaviour toward his girlfriend.
Although the attacker in Behind You is fictional, the novelās themes and subject matter hit close to home for Ms. Hernandez. She moved to Scarborough as a 10-year-old in 1987, the same year a notorious perpetrator known as the Scarborough Rapist began terrorizing women and girls. āAlthough he was eventually incarcerated, there have been countless people around the world who have survived sexual violence, including myself,ā says Ms. Hernandez. āWhat did we learn from this? How have investigations changed since then? The answer is, not much.ā
Ms. Hernandez is quick to point out, however, that this novel is not about knowing the serial killer. Itās about the survivors and victims of sexual harm and how society allows perpetrators to do what they do, she says. āRape culture tells us that if we lock up perpetrators, weāre good. Weāre all safe. But dismantling rape culture means a daily practice of honouring each otherās boundaries, celebrating each otherās bodies, and having difficult discussions when we hurt each other.ā
In short, this book is Ms. Hernandezās rallying cry for embodied change. And she has done her best to not let any fears cloud the work. āWe must all look at how we are complicit in rape culture,ā she says, āand how we can reparent ourselves and raise a future generation of people who respect the bodies of people around them.ā
is available from HarperCollins Canada.