Cloudland, by Joseph Olshan. St. Martin’s Minotaur, 304
pages, $24.99 hardcover.
When an Olshan novel is gay, it’s very, very gay – consider,
for example, Nightswimmer and The Conversion. His ninth novel mostly
eschews the gay – except for the expectations around one of the major male
characters, and in the case of a lesbian couple – but that’s no reason for
queer-interest readers to pass on this compelling fact-based fiction about a
New England serial killer. The story’s sort-of sleuth is reclusive Catherine
Winslow, a former investigative journalist who has dialed her life down to
writing a quirky household-hints column. The world intrudes, however, when she
stumbles on the frozen body of a murdered nurse, the sixth such victim. But
unraveling the mystery, thrilling as it is, is almost beside the point. Elegant
writing, intricate plotting and, most particularly, wholly complex characters
are what really drive the narrative. In Winslow – who is grieving the death of
the husband she had divorced, is mending her relationship with a lesbian
daughter and is ruing her somewhat scandalous romance with young graduate
student Matthew – Olshan has crafted a fascinating female character.
Don’t Let Me Go, by J.H. Trumble. Kensington Books, 352
pages, $15 paper.
Small-town Texas high school senior Nate is the narrator of
this gritty young adult novel, a story of coming-out anguish, teenage passion,
romantic bliss, homophobic hatred, long-distance relationships, searing
jealousy, straight friendship, puppy love and the eventual triumph of
happy-ever-after. Nate’s beau of eight months is Adam, and after cautious
flirtation leads to an intense affair, they’ve been inseparable – until Adam,
at Nate’s urging, moves to New York to follow his actor’s heart. At first, the
boys fill their days with IM’s and their nights with Skype, but their
connection tapers off as Adam is drawn into his acting whirl – and as Nate
glimpses one of Adam’s often-nude New York roommates in the background of their
video chats. Bereft, Nate starts a gay-and-proud blog with the assistance of a
tech-savvy older boy (though why Nate needs help to set up a blog is never
explained), and among his followers is a love-struck younger student who only
adds to Nate’s emotional conflicts. Trumble’s perceptive take on teen life is a
plot-packed triumph.
Outlaw Marriages: The Hidden Histories of Fifteen
Extraordinary Same-Sex Couples, by Rodger Streitmatter. Beacon Press, 224
pages, $26.95 hardcover.
Even when much has already been written about some of the
same-sex couples covered in this exhaustively researched and cogently compact
collection of joint histories – Walt Whitman and Peter Doyle, Tennessee
Williams and Frank Merlo, for example – cultural historian Streitmatter brings
fresh insights to his mini-biographies. His thesis: that the often lesser-known
partner provided artistic stimulus or emotional support to his or her
companion: 21-year-old Doyle became the muse for Whitman, 45; Merlo
"single-handedly stabilized" Williams’ life and thus his career. The same can
be said of almost all of the 15 outlaw marriages the author selected: over the
43-year relationship of Mary Rozet Smith and Jane Addams, it was Smith’s wealth
that provided the financial backing for Addams’ activism; over the 38 years
that James Baldwin was coupled with Lucien Happersberger, the latter’s
emotional stability provided Baldwin with the security he needed to write. Many
of these unsanctioned marriages endured until a partner’s death; one lasted
less than a decade; some included jealousy and betrayal. But as America’s
acceptance of marriage equality expands, Streitmatter’s study stands as proof
that there have always been queer pairings.
The Harder She Comes: Butch/Femme Erotica, edited by DL
King. Cleis Press, 208 pages, $14.95 paper.
Once upon a time, and that time was 1992, Joan Nestle edited
The Persistent Desire, a slightly controversial-for-its-time collection of
essays, poems and personal accounts celebrating the butch/femme dynamic. For a
while, the subject remained mostly scholarly, though Bella Books released
Therese Szymanski’s erotic fiction anthology, Back to Basics, in 2004; after
a lull, two years ago, Cleis published the Tristan Taormina-edited fiction
anthology, Sometimes She Lets Me, and last year Arsenal Pulp Press published Persistence,
edited by Ivan E. Coyote and Zena Sharman, paying homage to Nestle’s pioneering
book. Which brings us to King’s collection, 18 stories ranging from historic
femme/butch role-playing (dark red dress desires well-worn denim, trouser-glad
butch is drawn to a femme’s silver-skirted buttocks) to the kind of fantasies
that would possibly have riled the butches and femmes of a more binary world –
stories in which bois are in sexual play, in which a Daddy dotes on his little
girl. The boundaries around gender have blurred, and this quality collection
celebrates new dimensions of butch and femme.
Featured Excerpt
From the moment a mutual friend introduced Martha Carey
Thomas to Mamie Gwinn, the older woman was smitten. "Mamie is the cleverest
girl – damnably clever – I ever had anything to do with," Thomas wrote in her
diary in 1878, when she was 21 and Gwinn was 17. "She is fantastic in so many
ways." Gwinn wasn’t initially attracted to Thomas, finding her unladylike
because she spoke in "a sledge-hammer voice," was "ill-dressed" and had a habit
of "being highly animated" when she talked. But after learning that Thomas had
an independent nature and a college degree, Gwinn was drawn to the slightly
older woman. She offered the potential, as Gwinn wrote in her diary, "for me to
escape alike a husband and my parent’s rule."
– from Outlaw Marriages, by Rodger Streitmatter
Footnotes
BOOKS TO WATCH OUT FOR: Sprightly Lethe Press is having an
active spring, with a number of new titles across several genres. This month
sees the release of Jeff Mann’s Purgatory, a Civil War-set novel about the
fraught romance between a war-weary young Southerner who would rather be a
scholar than a soldier, and a Herculean Yankee captured by the Confederates.
Two May titles are Lewis DeSimone’s The Heart’s History, about a dying man
who has remained something of a mystery to his circle of friends, and Beyond
Binary, edited by Brit Mandelo, an anthology of queer speculative short
stories ranging in characters from angels to androids and in settings from
space colonies to small college towns. And in July, the publisher releases Alex
Jeffers’ fantastical short story collection, You Will Meet a Stranger Far from
Home; in one tale, an American teenager has an erotic encounter with Adonis
while sailing off the coast of Turkey, and another teen on vacation is
transformed by his encounter with three fallen angels. Other recent Lethe
titles are Jerry Wheeler’s imaginatively titled short story collection,
Strawberries and Other Erotic Fruits, and Joseph R.G. DeMarco’s Crimes on
Latimer: From the Early Cases of Marco Fontana, a collection of six short
stories, prequels of sorts to two novels, Murder on Camac and A Body on
Pine, featuring the young sleuth.
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.