
Franky Gets Real, by Mel Bossa

Jack Holmes & His Friend, by Edmund White
Jack Holmes & His Friend, by Edmund
White. Bloomsbury USA, 400 pages, $26 hardcover.
One of the many charms of White’s latest novel
is that there is nothing pretentious about it. The writing is sensuous and
stylish, the story is sexy and straightforward, the characters are cultured and
always ready to cavort sexually – though not with each other. Handsome,
well-hung Jack, who escaped his rigid Midwestern upbringing with a porn star
name that belies his initial reluctance to live a queer life, falls hard at
first sight for Will, the well-bred sophisticate who becomes his colleague at
an upscale literary magazine in the late 1960s – but who is, alas, irredeemably
straight. Turns out that a promiscuous gay man in pre-AIDS Manhattan and a (for
a time) suburban family man can at least be friends.
Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots: Flaming
Challenges to Masculinity, Objectification, and the Desire to Conform, edited
by Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore. AK Press, 224 pages, $17.95 paper.
"My business is to comfort the afflicted and
afflict the comfortable," it’s said that social activist Mother "Mary" Jones
once said (though a polemical 19th-century journalist is often cited as the
original source). In this third anthology, after Nobody Passes and That’s
Revolting, Bernstein, herself something of an activist and polemicist, honors
both of his antecedents. With a sharp editor’s eye, she has collected 29
visceral essays celebrating defiant nonconformity and subversive flamboyance –
writing that afflicts the gay mainstream while comforting the outcast rebels,
fierce queens and gender-redefining queers who birthed Queer Lib but are now
forsaken by it. D. Travers Scott dreams of a less fetish-rigid drop-down
Internet; CAConrad offers body fascism-defying delight in his fat self; Lewis
Wallace recalls youthful trans lust; James Villanueva writes about his spunky
presence as a queer Latino in a straight, white cowboy bar. These contributors
and their sisters and brothers are flipping their middle finger at both
LGBTQ-phobia and the manifest intolerance of mainstream gays for their sort
with candid cockiness and glamorous gutsiness.
Franky Gets Real, by Mel Bossa. Bold
Strokes, 236 pages, $16.95 paper.
Five old friends, a long weekend at the lake
and 15 years of fear, regret, disappointment and denial – that’s the volatile
mix of Bossa’s bravura third novel. Charismatic Wyatt’s marriage is falling
apart after an unexpected reminder of youthful sexual pain; law student Holly,
the most level-headed of the lot, is pregnant and blissfully in love with a
solid, stolid man; brainy but naive Nevins, swindled by a hooker, is stealing
to cover his debts; Wyatt’s baffling younger brother, Alek, is coping with
disease; and Franky – who 15 years earlier rebuffed Alek’s gentle, desperate
offer of love – is torn between his strained relationship with a woman and his
nascent desire for men. Blending the melodrama of the 1983 movie The Big
Chill with the unsettling drunken confessions of a high school reunion, Bossa
has crafted a textured novel that captures the drama of complex, realistic
characters confronting the secrets and lies that threaten to fracture their
friendship – and, in the end, learning to strengthen the ties that bid.
J. Edgar Hoover & Clyde Tolson:
Investigating the Sexual Secrets of America’s Most Famous Men and Women, by
Darwin Porter. Blood Moon Productions, 576 pages, $19.95 paper.
Tightly closed closet doors haven’t got a
chance when it comes to the fiercely tabloid tendencies of prolific biographer
Porter. In earlier books, he has chronicled the same-sex hijinks of the likes
of Marlon Brando, Howard Hughes , Katherine Hepburn, Steve McQueen and many
more, mining Hollywood lore for the scandalous and the salacious. And though
the focus shifts from Los Angeles to Washington, DC, in this explicit depiction
of FBI honcho Hoover and Tolson, his BFF (and way more), there’s no shortage of
Hollywood cameos – Hoover sent his G-Men minions to ferret out the sexual
secrets of the likes of Fred Astaire and Ramon Novarro, even as he and Tolson
were frequenting boy bordellos and ogling sex acts in Havana in the 1930s. In
anecdote after anecdote, many sourced in the text (though there is no
bibliography of books used as reference), Porter leaves no doubt that the two
men were more than bachelor friends; this breathless biography goes way past
the innuendo of Clint Eastwood’s film depiction of J. Edgar and Clyde.
Featured Excerpt
We are all failing: the intoxicating visions
of gay liberation have given way to an obsession with beauty myth consumer
norms, mandatory masculinity, objectification without appreciation and a
relentless drive to police the borders. And yet, what might we conjure, create,
and cultivate with our dreams that remain. Why Are Faggots So Afraid of
Faggots? reinvokes the anger, flamboyance, and subversion once thriving in gay
subcultures, in order to imagine something dangerous and lovely: an exploration
of the perils of assimilation; a call for accountability; a vision for change.
We are ready.
– from Why Are Faggots Afraid of
Faggots?, by Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore
Footnotes
Gay Voices, a newish addition to The
Huffington Post, featured through January meaty conversations between gay
authors. In the first, pioneering out writers Edmund White and Felice Picano
discussed their own and each other’s work with mutual respect – and much
candor. In one exchange, White reveals that his classic, A Boy’s Own Story,
is less autobiographical than many reviewers thought: "When I came to write A
Boy's Own Story, the boy in the book is an average student and is very timid
about sex. But if I had written it about what I really was like, that same
character that so many people identified with would have turned out as a sort
of freak show because he is definitely not who I was. By 16, the age of that
character, I'd won all these academic awards and I had like five hundred sexual
encounters by then. I was a toilet queen..." In a second installment of the
series, Christopher Rice and Eric Shaw Quinn dig into the question of how "gay
sensibility" impacts their writing: "That's what I'm dealing with right now
with my novel, The Heavens Rise. One of the major characters is gay
but...he's not dealing with sexual persecution. It's not about his romantic
life. It's about him trying to unravel the mystery of his straight friend's
disappearance.... So does his simple presence in the narrative make the whole
affair a ‘gay novel’?" For the full conversations: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gay-voices
.
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.