The Truth is Bad Enough: What Became of the Happy
Hustler?, by Michael Kearns. CreateSpace, 294 pages, $15.95 paper.
First he was a precocious boy, acting in and directing plays
– and reveling in sex with older men – before he finished high school. Then he
was a serious actor, a serious drunk, a serial sexaholic, and, in the
mid-1970s, a celebrated hoaxster, doing the talk show circuit as "Grant Tracy Saxon," alleged author of a fake memoir, The Happy
Hustler, all the while selling his body to eager johns (and appearing in a
couple of episodes of The Waltons). Next came hard-won sobriety, AIDS
activism, HIV infection, a series of searing one-man performances and of
shimmering collaborations with his professional colleague, the late James
Carroll Pickett. And now, still acting and directing (and surviving), Kearns is
reveling in his finest role – father to an African-American child he adopted
more than 15 years ago. Kearns is unsparing in recounting his addictive days,
candid about how his queer and AIDS activism impacted his Hollywood career and
– in the final chapters – luminous in imparting the love he shares with his
daughter, who now aspires to be an actor, just like dad. This multi-textured
memoir shimmers.
Being Emily, by Rachel Gold. Bella Books, 210 pages,
$15.95 paper.
Big hands, broad shoulders, solid biceps, hard chest, lanky
swim team-honed body – teenager Christopher is all boy. But there’s a girl
within, and her name is Emily. Around other lads, "Chris" slips into manly mode
to avoid being the prey of high school bullies, but sets an alarm clock to 4
a.m. in order, behind a securely locked door, to don soft clothes and imagine a
more feminine world. Chris’s goth girlfriend, Claire, is repelled when Chris
tells her, heart racing, that "I’m a girl" – though she soon becomes a makeup-applying
conspirator; Chris’s parents are both condescending and confrontational when
they learn of Emily; even Chris’s first therapist insists that being an Emily
is perverted. Salvation comes through a trans support group, a more supportive
therapist and – a nice touch – fumbling but loving acknowledgement and
semi-acceptance by Chris’s father. Gold’s young adult novel about the emotional
and physical transition from boy to girl – despite repeated cloying, too-coy
references to "boy parts"; what’s so awful about calling a penis a penis? – is
a graceful novel about transitions.
Love, Christopher Street: Reflections of New York City,
edited by Thomas Keith. Vantage Point Books, 406 pages, $18.95 paper.
Back when Alyson Books was a going concern, then-editor
Joseph Pittman published Love, Bourbon Street, celebrating New Orleans;
Love, Castro Street, celebrating San Francisco; and Love, West Hollywood,
celebrating Los Angeles. Missing? New York, of course. So, after a years-long
hiatus, the queer-city series returns, at last, from a new press and to the
city of Stonewall. Gay comic Bob Smith opens with a profoundly personal essay
blending a brief history of LGBT comics, a memory-lane remembrance of early New
York days, and a no-self-pity-here account of the progression of his Lou
Gehrig’s disease ("I don’t even like baseball!"). Gay comic Eddie Sarfaty
nicely bookends the collection with a closing essay about welcoming his
sophisticated Manhattan friends to his mother’s very suburban home for an
irreligious Passover feast. In between, mystery author Val McDermid recalls her
first wide-eyed visit to Greenwich Village, publicist Michele Karlsberg reveals
queer Staten Island, and more than 20 other writers (Thomas Glave’s is a most
astoundingly literary reflection) tell how Manhattan and the boroughs shaped
their queer lives.
Why is the Penis Shaped Like That? And Other Reflections on
Being Human, by Jesse Bering. FSG/Scientific American, 288 pages, $16 paper.
Most of the 30-plus columns here first appeared on
ScientificAmerican.com; some are from the online magazine Slate. Research
psychologist Bering writes about sex, life and the human condition – a handful
of the pieces examine cannibalism, suicide, free will
and religious belief – with such easy-going prose and ready wit that’s
it not always apparent which outlet, the scientifically specialist or the
lower-brow populist, spawned which essay. From the function of the scrotum to
the purpose of pubic hair to the fact that humans masturbate far more
frequently than other primates to assessments of assorted fetishes (podophilia,
anyone?), Bering is often saucy and occasionally salacious but always factual –
his prose is irresistibly irreverent, but he’s a writer who reveres scientific
rigor. He’s also quite openly queer. Overall, his "reflections on being human"
are unabashedly filtered through a personal, personable gay voice, and one
section of the collection "The Gayer Science: There’s Something Queer Here,"
addresses such LGBT issues as "homophobia as repressed desire" and "is your
child pre-homosexual?"
Featured Excerpt
"I just want to live long
enough to be a grandfather – that’s my goal," I tell her. "You’ll live to be
eighty-five," Tia proclaims, not joking but introducing a certain gravitas.
"Honey, what about my poor feet? I don’t think I can live twenty-five more
years with this pain." "They’ll be able to make you new feet by then." I laugh.
"It’s true, I suppose. I’ll be the grandpa with fake feet!" As our years
together have unfolded, it does seem that Tia may take the world by storm
before I take my permanent leave. For so many years, my overriding fear was
that I’d die before she was the age of emancipation. But it now feels like I’ll
be chirping plaintively in an empty nest.
– from The Truth is Bad
Enough
Footnotes
LOVE AND MARRIAGE (IN)EQUALITY: The politics and passions
behind the American push for traditional marriage and the pushback against
same-sex marriage are the focus of Melanie Heath’s One Marriage Under God: The
Campaign to Promote Marriage in America, now available from New York
University Press ($24 paper) ... BATTLES OVER GAY marriage are the focus of
Sasha Issenberg’s The Engagement, an account of the unprecedented political,
social and legal transformations over a quarter century that have moved
marriage equality from the margins of American life to the mainstream and seen
it endorsed by President Obama and supported by a majority of American adults;
the narrative history is a 2013 title from Crown Books ... IN A LIGHTER VEIN,
Manhattan playwright (The Boys Upstairs) and Soho House event planner Jason
Mitchell has sold Getting Groomed – a mostly serious (fine food, festive
flowers) and sometimes facetious ("where to seat the homophobic uncle") guide
for gay grooms on how to negotiate the ins and outs of fabulous nuptials – to
Chronicle Books, heading to the publication altar next year ... AND IN KEN
O’NEILL’S farcical first novel, The Marrying Kind, wedding planner Adam More
and his not-yet-wedded hubby Steven Worth launch a boycott of the wedding
industry, causing florists, cater-waiters, hairdressers, organists and other
wedding-connected queers to withdraw their services to protest marriage
inequality; the romantic call to arms is now available from Bold Strokes Books
($16.95 paper).
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.