Wingshooters, by Nina Revoyr. Akashic Books, 250 pages,
$15.95 paper.
Xenophobia is rampant in rural Vietnam War-era Wisconsin,
and for most of Revoyr’s fourth novel, it’s focused squarely on
almost-10-year-old Michelle LeBeau, small-town Deerhorn’s only non-white
resident. Her father – son of Charlie LeBeau, one of the racist town’s more
upstanding citizens, despite his own inherent bigotry – has dumped the young
girl with her grandparents while he travels the country trying to reconnect
with his Japanese wife, who has fled the family. Bullied relentlessly at school
for being "different" and isolated from her peers, the young girl finds solace
in the company of both her devoted dog and her doting grandfather, who – though
he loathed his son’s interracial marriage – connects with tomboyish Michelle
(he calls her Mikey) through her love of fishing, hunting and baseball, manly
pursuits his own son avoided. When a young black couple arrives, Deerhorn’s
deep-rooted intolerance explodes from sullen to savage, their presence leading
to race-based hatred that tears the town apart. Revoyr writes about deep
heartache, flawed characters and squandered anger with infinite grace.
A Pornography of Grief, by Philip Huang. Signal 8 Press,
193 pages, $12.95 paper.
It would be a mistake to read the 18 stories in this slim
debut collection in one sitting. The tales are short – many under 10 pages –
but they all pack an impressionistic punch that demands, and deserves, an
interlude of reflection. Or, often, a re-reading; Huang’s prose is at once stirring,
shocking, subversive and, all the while, subtle. Most of the pieces are infused
with grief: "The Widow Season" is about the troubled relationship between a gay
man and his dead lover’s mother; in "Okra," a woman mourns the death of her
baby, but the reader is told, matter-of-factly, that "babies die every day"; in
"Saturday," a dazed man’s dog dies; "Childhood," one of the lustier stories, is
about a man coping with AIDS and death. But the world of Huang isn’t entirely
dire and dour: One of the more straightforward stories, "House Party," features
two stoned roommates whose apartment is taken over, comically, by refugees from
a party across the hall; "Colin Farrell’s Penis" is a hilarious vignette about
beautiful bodies and political assassination.
A Saving Remnant: The Radical Lives of Barbara Deming and
David McReynolds, by Martin Duberman. The New Press, 312 pages, $27.95
hardcover.
Gay historian and biographer Duberman had planned to write
about "some half-dozen" lesbian and gay activists of the 1900s – none of them
particularly committed to just the narrow focus of gay liberation – when he
began research for this inspiring book. But the stories of Barbara Deming (born
in 1917 to an upper-middle-class New York family) and David McReynolds (born in
1929, raised a Baptist, soon a socialist) captured his attention. Both were out
before being so was politically in – the left was pretty homophobic in the ’50s
and ’60s – though Deming was far more sexually precocious than McReynolds; both
threw themselves into such vital leftish concerns as civil rights, peaceful
protest and anti-war activism. Their political passions often overlapped,
though they led quite separate lives, and for a while feuded over women’s
rights. Duberman has crafted a riveting account of the public lives and noble
ideals of two fierce queers, through which he threads a well-mannered glimpse
of their sexual lives – Deming was involved in a series of lesbian
relationships, while McReynolds in his younger days cruised for sex.
Burnings, by Ocean Vuong. Sibling Rivalry Press, 40 pages,
$12 paper; Road Work Ahead, by Raymond Luczak. Sibling Rivalry Press, 80
pages, $14.95 paper.
There’s an old voice in many of young Ocean Vuong’s poems –
he was born in 1988 – particularly in those in the first section of this bold
debut collection, where he recalls a culture left behind when his family
emigrated from Vietnam and re-imagines the atrocities of a war he did not live
through, all the while rendering the emotion of loss with vulnerable intensity.
The focus of the second section shifts to more personal work: an ode to
masturbation, self-fellatio as prayer, the memory of boys touching in the dark
– poems pulsing with the lust of youth, but just as vulnerable and intense. And
as one poet comes into his queerness, another reflects on life after the end of
a long relationship. Raymond Luczak’s fourth collection dwells on loss – one
poem, in memory of a beloved basset hound, opens with "One morning I will
depart and leave her/ with the man I once loved" – but the writing is more
nostalgic than it is melancholy, the expression of an aching heart beating with
hope for love to be realized.
Featured Excerpt
Exiled, I found citizenship/ in the republic of my body–/
that ravaged landscape I navigate/ by heart. And it’s easy, becoming/ what’s
yours. Can’t say I know/ why Adam surrendered his rib–/ my Lord lies/ between
my legs, and each morning/ I curl to meet my maker’s lips/ I pray faithfully in
the cathedral/ of raised legs, my hair haloed by sunlight/ as I bow deeper,
eager to receive/ His blessing.
– "Self-Fellatio as Prayer," from Burnings, by Ocean
Vuong
Footnotes
CHARIS BOOKS & MORE, one of America’s few remaining
women’s bookstores, hopes to relocate within a year to a larger location, transforming
itself into the Charis Feminist Center with a café, more room for programming,
and with space to share with nonprofit organizations. The 37-year-old
bookstore’s current building is for sale, and a campaign to raise $1 million –
co-chaired by the same now-active philanthropist who provided seed money for
the bookstore in 1974 – has started. "We’ve been dreaming about this for 10 or
15 years and finally we have the right people on board to make it happen," co-owner
Angela Gabriel told the Georgia Voice... CELEBRITY BLOGGER and gossip monger
Perez Hilton, whose voice has sometimes been quite venomous, has signed with
Celebra and the Penguin Young Reader’s Group for a children’s book, The Boy
with Pink Hair – a kid with a "shock of fabulous hair" who yearns to fit in
with his peers. According to Hilton, the picture book is intended to appeal "to
every kid that’s ever had a dream, felt excluded, wanted to belong, and hoped
that one day they could do what they loved and make a difference"... POET AND MEMOIRIST
Mark Doty has been named a recipient of a Literature Award from the American
Academy of Arts and Letters, an honor that comes with $7,500.
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.