What I would like to see is a novel of a d/Deaf character, written by a d/Deaf person who was not afraid to hold a real mirror up to the hearing world showing how they look to d/Deaf people.
Don't know if it would sell though, that is the rub, but I think in the right hands it would be a great novel.
We will see what happens.
By "mix of spoken English and ASL" I meant that most of the secondary characters are hearing and speak English, but that through their contact with the Deaf character they've learned some signs, ranging from fingerspelling and a few signs for some characters to ASL fluency in his girlfriend's case.
This is the really tricky part for me. Since ASL syntax is different from spoken English I don't want the dialogue to be confusing to hearing readers, but at the same time it's very important to me that the "feeling" of the language comes across--that the written dialogue isn't just a stand-in for spoken dialogue, but that it actually conveys the feeling of signed dialogue, and I want to hit that mark to the degree that Deaf readers will see it as authentic to their culture and experience, as opposed to co-opting that culture.
I really appreciate your feedback, especially about describing the signs the characters make. I've been trying it and it's been really liberating--describing how a character makes a certain sign or series of signs makes it easier to reveal emotions than describing a facial expression or a tone of voice. It also gives me a lot of opportunities for metaphor and for poetic expressions that wouldn't be there otherwise.
Here's a question--how would you handle attributions for signed dialogue? "He signed" or "she signed" seem awkward in repetition. My idea is to go with "he said" or "she said" but to make it clear that they're signing the dialogue, and to eschew quotation marks for anything that's signed.
Well, in the beginning I would make the reader know that there is a deaf character involve so we don't have to use impression or hand motion too much, but I would make sure that the character was using hand motion with spoken words. And also for a chacater's voice, in my writing I do let the reader know what his/her voice sounds like, even their hand motions. But if a deaf character is silence while he/she signs, I make sure I let the reader know. And for that hearing chacarter, I did add what the deaf character was saying to other hearing character(s) that doesn't know any signs so that way they will know what the two people were talking about instead of being left out. But I did even made those other characters left out, just like the real out world today like some hearing people normally do--leaving deaf person left out, or even backwards.
With hearing people communicating with a deaf person, I would make sure this deaf character doesn't understand every single word he/she was saying, unless that hearing person do know signs. I would be careful about that. Not every deaf person do understand hearing person, not always...trust me, not always, even I am hard-of-hearing...it is a fact...
About sounds that deaf people normally hears everyday is not like what hearing people hears...you can ask your deaf friends or hard of hearing what those sounds sound like...it may sound odd to you if you were a hearing person, trust me... For a good example, not every deaf person knows what cricket even sounds like...I have to describe what the deaf person think the cricket sounds like or he/she ever knew what it sounds like.
So my writing may be odd to some hearing readers but, I am writing facts what the deaf world is like, and how it feels to be one, etc... So the hearing will come to an understanding what a deaf culture really like in the real world. It is not make-believe, or any guessing facts...
I have written two complete novels with deaf character in the story. I tell ya, it is a lot of work, and it is not easy but I made it through alright...I love it...My friends were surprised by my writing, and asking for more...so that is why I decide to write in series instead, to divide those into four novellas, more like Goosebumps series since I don't ever see any teenager books for boys nowadays...so I will make that happen, boys do read too, not just girls...