| His Smoke Rose Up Forever |
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| Reviews | |
| Written by Lisa Jain Thompson | |
| Sunday, 17 September 2006 | |
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James Tiptree, Jr., The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon is the first major work on a person born transsexual coming to terms with her place in an unknowing society.
![]() James Tiptree, Jr.,
The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon.
By Julie Phillips. Illustrated. 469 pp.
St. Martin’s Press. $27.95. Springfield, Virginia, USA. James Tiptree, Jr. (August 24, 1915 – May 19, 1987) was the pen name of American science fiction author Alice Bradley Sheldon used from 1987 until her death. Until 1977, no one knew that James Tiptree Jr. was a woman.
On May 19, 1987, at age 71, Sheldon took the life of her 84-year-old, nearly blind husband and then took her own, ending a life of great successes matched by greater personal torments.
Phillips’ biography shines a light on both the bright seductive surface of Tiptree’s short stories and the bleakness of Sheldon’s personal life that lies hidden in the stories’ undercurrents. Tiptree/Sheldon wrote powerful fiction that challenges readers' assumptions about sex and gender.
Most reviewers approach this biograghy as feminists, seeing the life of Tiptree/Sheldon as a parable of the the feminist movement. I too am a feminist but I also am a person born transsexual. Reading the pages of Phillips’ book I heard Alice’s own words strike deep inside me.
In a world without the words, in a culture where such thoughts were forbidden, Alice B. Sheldon own words sound loudly like a man trapped in a woman’s body trying to fit in. From the hidden personal pain
thru pain of wanting what you cannot have
to the failed attempts to lead the expected life
the transsexual writer reveals herself. The guilt and pain that goes with being a trapped transsexual calls to all of us who have tried to play the hand we were dealt and failed.
I have been there, done that, and failed like Alice.
We all try to be the sons and daughters our parents expected.
Pleasing our mothers and fathers is a basic human drive; conforming to peer group expectations is a ritual of childhood and adolescence. We go to school, make friends, graduate, get jobs, do all those things everyone else does and hide what is within from the world outside.
And for all of her careful acting, for all her failed attempts at self-delusions, Sheldon’s true self continually forces itself to the surface. At the bottom line, Alice knows who she is and who she should have been.
Sheldon was born in a society without an internet, raised in times where sexuality and gender were neither discussed nor questions.
How does a closeted transsexual survive and not die inside? For Alice, the solution was James Tiptree, Jr., the male pseudonym that freed the person inside to be himself.
All good things must end, however. The façade can only go on so long, especially if you start winning Hugo and Nebula awards and have thousands of science fiction fans trying to meet you. Within a decade Sheldon was confronted by the inevitable – how to reveal her true identity.
What to give up? How can she choose between the voice within and the woman the world sees?
Sheldon echoes a dilemma familiar to most transsexuals: we don’t want to risk loosing our families, our children, our friends, and even our church, but we cannot stop being transsexuals trapped inside the wrong body. If we stay the status quo, we die within, crazy within our own minds, or die without by our hand:
If we come out to the world, how will our friends react? Will we even have any friends?
Beneath the feminist biography, beneath the story of the brilliant pseudonymous science fiction writer, lives the life of an archetypical transsexual trying to understand herself and break free. Transsexuals are everywhere, in every social stratus, in every job, in every nationality, and in every ethnic group. There are thousands of people born transsexual in the world in every walk of life. Alice Sheldon was but one, one who took her secret to the grave.
Phillips has written an important biography, but not the one she thinks. James Tiptree, Jr., The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon is the first major work on person born transsexual coming to terms with her place in an unknowing society.
Everyone who is transsexual, knows someone who is transsexual, or wants to learn more about an archetypical transsexual life owes it to themselves to read this book.
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| Last Updated ( Monday, 25 September 2006 ) | |







And for all of her careful acting, for all her failed attempts at self-delusions, Sheldon’s true self continually forces itself to the surface. At the bottom line, Alice knows who she is and who she should have been.
Beneath the feminist biography, beneath the story of the brilliant pseudonymous science fiction writer, lives the life of an archetypical transsexual trying to understand herself and break free. Transsexuals are everywhere, in every social stratus, in every job, in every nationality, and in every ethnic group. There are thousands of people born transsexual in the world in every walk of life. Alice Sheldon was but one, one who took her secret to the grave.