
By Nightfall, by Michael Cunningham

Something About Trevor, by Drew Hunt
By Nightfall, by Michael Cunningham. Farrar, Straus &
Giroux, 256 pages, $25 hardcover.
The allure of astounding beauty and how the mind can betray
the body are the core of Cunningham’s elegant novel, whose efficient narrative
arc echoes that of Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice (Cunningham prefaced a new
translation a few years ago): older man is enraptured by younger man’s physical
perfection. Here, the older man is Peter Harris, happily married to Rebecca,
with a burgeoning career as a middle-aged art curator in Manhattan. The younger
man is his wife’s rapscallion brother, Ethan, a lithe 23, known to the family
as Mizzy, "the mistake" – his birth, decades after Rebecca’s, wasn’t planned.
He’s a moocher, a drug addict, a Yale dropout and, in Peter’s eyes,
hypnotically handsome, all the more so because he is his much older sister’s
male-model look-alike, recalling for Peter Rebecca’s beauty when they first
met. Mid-age angst, the hollow nature of elites, the elusiveness of
once-dreamed goals, the vanity of unexamined lives – all are qualms confronted
in a poetically pyrotechnic mix of humor and pathos about achieving the
strength to forgive self and others.
Missed Her, by Ivan E. Coyote. Arsenal Pulp Press, 148
pages, $16.95 paper.
There is something to be said for knowing what to expect
from an author. From Coyote – certainly for her story collections – that means
a divinely astute and gently witty lot of life-based vignettes (though the book
is labeled fiction). The short-shorts – most just four pages long, revised from
Coyote’s regular column in the Vancouver paper Xtra West – cover a spectrum
of situations and experiences, but most are rooted in the author’s mixed-signal
gender identity: she’s a boyish-looking butch lesbian with a lapdog for a pet.
The 30 tales, a bracing blend of self-effacing and brave, embrace universal
themes within singular moments – "Good Old Days," about teaching memoir writing
to a class of senior citizens, confronts Coyote’s concerns about their
potential prejudice and realizes the sentiment that "love is just love." Fans
of the author’s four previous collections won’t find a new take on queer life
here, or a distinct departure in style. But in the case of Coyote’s warm,
perceptive storytelling, familiarity breeds contentment.
The Right to Be Out: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
in America’s Public Schools, by Stuart Biegel, 300 pages, $19.95 paper.
With queer-teen suicides suddenly in the news – not that
they haven’t deserved coverage before now – Biegel’s academic analysis of how
America’s educational system handles sexual orientation takes on a deserved
populist mantle. That said, this isn’t always an easy read – though it demands
to be read by more than the education professionals constituting its primary
market, it definitely belongs in every school library, and Biegel often
humanizes the abstract by telling the stories of teens who have confronted
homophobia. From examining the legal foundations of the right to be out and the
tension between rights on paper and the realities of the classroom, and from
exploring how to create change in the classroom to the oppressive culture of
school sports, teen bullying – though not the book’s focus – is a thematic,
timely presence; so is a concluding chapter on challenges faced by transgender
teens, the newest frontier in the struggle for gender identity rights and
freedom. Rigorous scholarship and empathic writing come together to shape a
breakthrough book.
Something About Trevor, by Drew Hunt. JMS Books, 184
pages, $12 paper.
One "something" about Trevor is that he’s gay – and pretty
proud about it, or at least defiantly open. Another "something" about Trevor is
that cricket player Paul – not quite a stereotypical straight man, though not
far from one either – verges on panic when, homeless because of a flood, Trevor
offers a spare room in his flat. Paul demurs, but after a couple of nights on
the lumpy couch of a loutish friend, he girds his emotional loins and accepts.
Yet another "something" about Trevor is that, as time passes, Paul’s tolerance
of his queer ways increases – especially after the flamboyant lad proves to be
something of a whiz cricket bowler (the novel is set in small-town England,
where weekend cricket is a jockish norm; think of the bowler as the pitcher in
baseball). Hunt’s easy-read romance, aimed at readers slightly older than young
adult, tackles sports bullying, cultural homophobia, fear of intimacy and
coming out with storytelling that is more earnest than stylish, yet with an
emotional honesty that propels the tale.
Featured Excerpt
"When is Mizzy coming?" he asks. "He said sometime next week. You know
how he is." "Mm." Peter does, in fact, know how he is. He’s one of those smart,
drifty young people who, after certain deliberations, decides he wants to do
Something in the Arts but won’t, possibly can’t, think in terms of an actual
job; who seems to imagine that youth and brains and willingness will simply
summon an occupation, the precise and perfect nature of which will reveal
itself in its own time. This family of women really ruined the poor kid, didn’t
they? Who could survive having been so desperately loved?
Footnotes
First, there was Speaking Out , an anthology of
young adult (YA) stories, announced earlier this year, edited by Lethe Press
publisher Steve Berman for Bold Strokes Books – "inspiring stories
of overcoming adversity (against intolerance and homophobia) and experiencing
life after coming out," according to the publisher’s announcement. "Queer teens
need tales of what might happen next in their lives, and editor Steve Berman
showcases a diversity of events, challenges and, especially, triumphs. More
recently, two YA-themed anthologies of essays and short stories have
been announced in the wake of a spate of teen suicides: Dutton Books has signed
advice columnist Dan Savage and his husband, Terry Miller, to edit It Gets
Better, a print offshoot of the couple’s YouTube videos aimed at
LGBTQ-identified kids, collecting essays by both celebrities and "ordinary
people," and due in March 2011. Meanwhile, Cheyenne Publishing’s Mark R. Probst
has announced Awake for June 2011, with net proceeds going to the
suicide-prevention program The Trevor Project. Nancy Garden – whose pioneering
YA novel, Annie on My Mind, was published in 1982 – is among contributors, as
is Kathe Koja, "a straight ally and proud mother of a gay
son." About the book, Probst said: "I know that gay
kids committing suicide is nothing new, but now it is finally being reported on
... I can’t help but wonder if the political climate isn’t contributing to the
despair LGBT youth are feeling today, as well as all the recent bullying."
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid- ‘70s.