Love/Imperfect, by Christopher T. Leland. Wayne State
University Press, 184 pages, $18.95 paper.
As in real life, gay mingles with straight in Leland’s first
collection (after five novels), 17 shimmering, sensual short stories linked by
the thematic threads of intimacy and love. Among the queer stories: "A Mother’s
Love," in which a young man’s mother agonizes over the "primal and terrible"
truth that her son is gay; "Memento Mori," in which two male American friends,
safely in a foreign land, hesitate on the boundary between unacknowledged
desire and sexual release; "Fellatio," which belies its coarse title by
relating the tender story of a father-of-five mill-worker’s romance with a
well-bred British lad who picks up the older man when he is 16, and who is a
World War casualty at 18; and, bridging the divide between homo and hetero, "As
If in Time of War," in which a gay man reflects on the imperfections of love
and family while passing an asexual yet intimate weekend with his former wife.
Leland’s supple, succinct prose marks him as a short story virtuoso.
Fair Play, by Tove Jansson, translated by Thomas Teal. New
York Review Books Classics, 120 pages, $14 paper.
Finnish author Jansson, who died in 2001, is best known in
the U.S. – if at all – as the author of comic strips and children’s picture
books featuring Moomins, best described as marshmallow hippos. But she stopped
writing those books in 1970; in later years, she published 11 novels and story
collections for grown-ups, including this gem, centered on the lives of two
older women: filmmaker Jonna and illustrator Mari, who live intertwined but
separate lives in a shared building – not quite a home together, though in the
series of 17 luminous vignettes that knit this short book into a novel, the two
women are seldom apart, even as each respects the other’s need for space and
separation. On the surface, theirs is a platonic intimacy, but Jansson’s
effortless prose and quiet humor – at least as filtered through Teal’s able
translation – hints at a "discreetly radical" relationship, to quote from
novelist Ali Smith’s gracious, and grateful, introduction. This is a sublime
novel about how fierce independence and eccentric love can commingle.
Adam’s Gift: A Memoir of a Pastor’s Calling to Defy the
Church’s Persecution of Lesbians and Gays, by Jimmy Creech. Duke University
Press, 368 pages, $29.95 hardcover.
In 1984, a young United Methodist pastor’s life was
transformed when one of his parishioners, a closeted, middle-aged gay man, told
him he was leaving the church because it would not accept his sexuality. Taken
aback – Creech writes that, up to that point, he was mostly oblivious to either
the presence or the plight of lesbians and gay men – the pastor set out to
challenge both the misreading of Bible scripture by religious homophobes and
his own church’s hidebound oppression of queers. Creech reached out to the gay
community, became involved in AIDS work and performed same-sex commitment
ceremonies well before "gay marriage" was an activist whisper. Because of those
ceremonies, he was put on ecclesiastical trial twice by his church for
disobeying its directives, and was finally defrocked in 1999. There are times
when this otherwise riveting, inspirational memoir bogs down in the minutiae of
parishioner squabbles. But Creech’s detailed dissection of deep-rooted anti-gay
attitudes, intensely personal and spiritually impassioned, honors a remarkable
straight ally.
Black Fire: Gay African-American Erotica, edited by Shane
Allison. Bold Strokes Books, 216 pages, $16.95 paper.
For the past several years, Allison has been a prolific
contributor of erotic short stories to dozens of anthologies, producing much of
the genre’s most distinctive prose. More recently, he’s turned to editing
anthologies himself – and he has an eye for talent. Several stories in this
collection are standouts: "Tomorrow," by Garland Cheffield, opens with a
break-dance battle between two B-boys destined for bed; ""B.E.," by D.
Fostalove, is set at an exclusive sex party; "Mutinous Chocolate," by Tom
Cardamone, depicts the relentless deterioration of a man’s life after his lover
leaves him; and "The Awakening," by Andre March, in which a brother’s Turkish
bath visit with his white girlfriend opens him to the kind of sex he really
wants. Allison’s canny mix of stories by both African-American and white
writers, and of black-on-black and black-on-white couplings, makes for a
wide-ranging collection despite its focused theme. That’s the case, too, with
another Allison-edited anthology, Afternoon Pleasures: Erotica for Gay
Couples, from Cleis Press, which includes another stellar story by Fostalove –
"Queen Intrigue," a tender tale about seduction and sex.
Featured Excerpt
All these years later, I think of him: naked and fair,
sprawled on that rooming house bed, inviting me, teasing me, telling me – who
never thought a thing about himself – that I am manly and handsome and worthy.
Alice, of course, in her way, has told me the same. But it was Harry – all his
richness and his naughty mouth and his endless ideas of what we could do – that
I remember, and that brings him before me, under a railroad bridge: fresh as an
apple, green as an emerald, sure as a prophet. My Harry. My own.
– from "Fellatio," in Love/Imperfect, by Christopher
T. Leland
Footnotes
Magnus Books, founded by former Alyson Books publisher Don
Weise after Alyson’s owner, Here Media, folded its print operation, has
announced its first list of books. The eclectic mix of titles includes three
novels: The Two Krishnas, by Ghalib Shiraz Dhalia, about the closet’s impact
on an Indian husband and wife; Through the Valley of the Nest of Spiders, by
Samuel R. Delany, a worthy successor to his outrageous earlier work, The Mad
Man; and Chulito, by Charles Rice-Gonzalez, about first love for two young Puerto
Rican men. Edmund White’s Sacred Monsters collects profiles of an essays
about iconic writers and artists, among them David Hockney and Allen Ginsburg.
In Holy Terror, Rev. Mel White issues a call to arms for queers to stand up
to the Christian Right; Perfect Light is a more pacifist collection of
reflections by LGBT Buddhists. Two memoirs address decades in queer lives:
political strategist David Mixner looks back, from his retreat into a
contemplative life at age 60, on four decades of activism, gay and otherwise,
in At Home with Myself; Double Life depicts the 50-year love story between
entertainment veteran Alan Shayne and artist Norman Sunshine, with a foreword
by director Mike Nichols. The most provocative title: Cobra Killer, by Andrew
E. Stoner and Peter A. Conway, which digs into the gruesome slaying by a pair
of ex-military hustlers of a rival porn producer – a slaying whose
investigation ensnared boyish porn director and performer Brent Corrigan.
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.