
a + e 4EVER, by Ilike Merey

Trick of the Dark, by Val McDermid
A Queer History of the United States, by Michael Bronski.
Beacon Press, 287 pages, $27.95 hardcover.
From the Puritan imposition of intolerant sexual mores on
the land that was to become America, to angry activism in the face of the
nation’s initial neglect of AIDS, Bronski’s cerebral hop, skip and jump
assessment of LGBT presence across the centuries is an astute, succinct
depiction of the truth that queers have always been everywhere – and everywhen.
Starting from the defensible position that gay people are intrinsically different
from straight people – something, says the author, that Native Americans
accepted in the days before Christopher Columbus – Bronski weaves gay, from the
poems of Walt Whitman to the letter pages of physique magazines, into his
eclectic narrative. Most intriguing: the anti-Puritan community of Merrymount,
where settlers celebrated sexuality with an 80-foot phallus. Bronski’s
invaluable history of queers, concluding formally in the 1990s, is a fine blend
of passionate and informed, and blessedly free of Judy Garland – though that
particular icon is cited, insightfully, on a single page: "Men could often find
one another at Marlene Dietrich and Judy Garland concerts."
Trick of the Dark, by Val McDermid. Bywater Books, 396
pages, $14.95 paper.
McDermid returns to her lesbian-sleuth roots (the six-novel
Lindsay Gordon series) in this standalone novel, as much a rumination on
marital and sexual fidelity as it is a body-littered mystery set at Oxford
University. Clinical psychiatrist Charlie Flint, suspended from her job while
facing charges of professional impropriety, is moping around the home she
shares with her wife of seven years – until she’s drawn into off-the-books
sleuthing with roots in her university past. Imperious Oxford don Corinna, her
one-time teacher, wants Charlie to investigate the wedding-day death of the man
who had just married her daughter, now smitten by a ball-busting businesswoman
and memoirist with several suspicious deaths in her own past. And, as if her
professional life were not conflicted enough, Charlie must confront emotional
and sexual confusion – she is being wooed, too tantalizingly, by another woman.
McDermid brings her hallmark complex plot to this accomplished thriller, which
is a switch from recent police procedurals in that it is dominated by mostly female
and several lesbian characters, rather than by the actual crime.
From Where We Sit: Black Writers Write Black Youth, edited
by Victoria A. Brownworth. Tiny Satchel Press, 336 pages, $16.95 paper.
Editor Brownworth slots this anthology into the Young Adult
genre, and, sure, teen characters are the focus of the stories. But there’s an
elder sensibility in several that ought to entice older readers as well. That’s
certainly the case with Jewelle Gomez’s "Caramelle 1864," a spin-off from her
celebrated 1991 novel, The Gilda Stories. Two young girls are at the story’s
heart, but the theme of African-Americans defying repression – one that
suffuses the collection – touches all ages. Craig Laurance Gidney’s "Bereft," in
which a black scholarship student at a Catholic school defies white bullies, is
more youth-focused, as is Becky Birtha’s "Johnnieruth," in which a tomboy’s
sensed sexuality is stirred when she glimpses the shared affection of two
women. Each of the 20 stories deals with what it means to be African-American,
but the most searing is Lowell Boston’s "Ten to One," in which a schoolboy,
after defending himself from a white boy’s attack, is singled out by his
redneck principal as the troublemaker. Asked to write an apology to the school,
he scrawls, "I am not a nigger."
a + e 4EVER, by Ilike Merey. Lethe Press, 214 pages, $18
paper.
Girl is attracted mostly to girls. Boy is attracted
primarily to boys. But girl is falling in love with boy. That’s the genderqueer
essence of this remarkable graphic novel, the engrossing story of two high
school outcasts who find solace and strength in each other’s company. Eulalie –
she prefers Eu – is a survivor in the school’s mean hallways. Asher, blessed
(and cursed) with an androgynous beauty, is every bully’s victim. And every
beating comes with a double terror – the stick-thin boy has an intense fear of
being touched. A shared passion for art at first connects the odd couple, and
their friendship deepens as Ash, urged along by Eu, comes out of his loner
shell and into his queer sexual sell – a self, to Eu’s dismay and despair, that
doesn’t, after all, include her. Merey’s dazzling style, combined with an
intricate narrative, results in work that is both an ebulliently graphic story
and a powerful young adult novel, a narrative about the ambiguity of love and
the shadings of queer.
Featured Excerpt
–I should just be a full-blown dyke and take advantage of
all this free advertising. Get myself a badass girlfriend. –So . . . why don’t
you? –Hmm . . . I had this girlfriend for a while, but it felt kinda weird.
Trent feels weird too though so . . . who knows? Maybe I’m more an Eddie Izzard
reversed. –An Eddie who? –Oh, he’s this Brit comedian dude who’s like . . . a
lesbo trapped in a man’s body. –So that would make you a gay guy trapped in a
girl’s body? –Something like that. –Sounds confusing. –Haha. Says you. –Hey,
I’m not confused!! –OK. So what do you call yourself? Gay? – . . . –Homo-flexible? Bi, mayhap? A guy who likes
sex with guys? A girlfag? –I don’t know. Why do I have to call it anything?
– from a + e 4EVER, by I. Merey
Footnotes
Playwright Robert Patrick, a pioneering gay writer whose 80
or so plays have been produced on thousands of stages since 1964, will receive
the 2011 Artistic Achievement Award from The New York Innovative Theatre Awards
for his "significant artistic" contribution to the Off-Off-Broadway theater
community. Actress Shirley Knight, who won a Tony in 1976 for her performance
in Patrick’s play, Kennedy’s Children, will accept on his behalf in New York
on Sept. 19; Patrick is now retired in Los Angeles. "The freedoms which Off-Off-Broadway helped win
for performing arts have changed theater,
movies and television worldwide," said Patrick. "To know that my work is
remembered is a staggering and humbling experience." Patrick’s The
Haunted Host premiered at the first Off-Off-Broadway theater, the Caffe Cino,
and three separate productions featured Harvey Fierstein of Torch Song
Trilogy fame. Patrick’s other work includes Blue is for Boys, the first play
about gay teenagers; The Trial of Socrates, the first play presented by the
City of New York; T-Shirts, which starred then-porn star Jack Wrangler;
Untold Decades, a gay history of America; and My Cup Runneth Over,
commissioned by Marlo Thomas as a vehicle for her and Lily Tomlin. Patrick’s
1998 novel, Temple Slave, is a fictionalized autobiography rooted in the
early years of gay theater and the Caffe Cino; his more overt and expansive
memoir, Film Moi: Narcissus in the Dark, was published online in 2009.
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.